FIFA: Keep the World in the World Cup

Football belongs to the world.

FIFA is planning the biggest World Cup ever: 48 teams, matches in 16 cities across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and billions watching around the world.  

FIFA has promised a safe, welcoming and ‘inclusive’ tournament through its Human Rights Framework. But under U.S. President Donald Trump, harsh anti-human rights rhetoric and immigration policies are creating fear instead.

With less than 100 days until kick-off, escalating attacks on immigrants and threats to press freedom and peaceful protest signal a tournament heading in the wrong direction. Tell FIFA to keep the world in the World Cup.

The world belongs in football.

Players across national teams, including those from the U.S., are often immigrants or come from immigrant families. Football’s history is one of crossing borders and chasing dreams. But new U.S. rules and rhetoric slam the door on the world.

Check out safety resources for journalists from our partners here and here.

We are a movement of fans, athletes, workers, local community members, and human rights organizations calling on FIFA to work with host countries to protect host city residents and communities, athletes’ rights, free speech, fans’ rights, press freedom, LGBTI rights, workers’ rights, and children’s rights to a safe tournament environment. This means among other things:

  • Securing a public commitment to refrain from immigration enforcement operations at all World Cup events and venues, as a first step to ending abusive detention and deportation practices throughout the U.S.
  • Ensure that all qualified teams, media, and fans affected by discriminatory visa and entry bans and social media surveillance will have equal access to the tournament regardless of nationality, religion, gender, or opinion.
  • Establishing a formal FIFA human rights monitoring mechanism, with independent oversight, engagement with civil society, and public reporting, for the duration of the tournament.
  • Implementing a FIFA child safeguarding policy that ensures families — including mixed-immigration status families — can attend the World Cup without fear of separation.
  • Making a clear public commitment to press freedom and regular access for journalists, from the border to the stadium and everywhere in between, so journalists can do their jobs telling the full story of this tournament both on and off the field.

Join us in telling FIFA to keep the world in the World Cup.

Related news

SAFER Handbook: Football Supporters Europe publishes project outcomes and good practices

SAFER Handbook: Football Supporters Europe publishes project outcomes and good practices

SAFER – Support & Awareness for Female fans in European football through Research, prevention, and remedy Football Supporters Europe is delighted to share the handbook from its SAFER (Support & Awareness for Female fans in European football through Research, prevention, and remedy) project. Download the SAFER handbook here. About the project SAFER, a Football Supporters Europe project supported by the […]

READ MORE

Olympics: Uphold human rights for all athletes

Olympics: Uphold human rights for all athletes

Requesting clarification on the IOC Working Group on Women’s Category The Sport & Rights Alliance has written to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) regarding the IOC Working Group on the “protection of the female category” and potential decisions to implement mandatory sex testing and a blanket ban on transgender and intersex athletes in the women’s […]

READ MORE

Olympics: Sex Testing Harms All Women and Girls

Olympics: Sex Testing Harms All Women and Girls

International Olympic Committee has no right to become ‘gender police’ of the world (Amsterdam, March 17, 2026) – The International Olympic Committee (IOC) should abandon potential plans to mandate genetic sex testing and ban transgender and intersex athletes, the Sport & Rights Alliance (SRA), ILGA World, Humans of Sport and over 100 other allied organizations […]

READ MORE

Related resources

“Do it well and do it deeply”: Navigating Safe Sport Entities

“Do it well and do it deeply”: Navigating Safe Sport Entities

Workshop Recap: Recent Advances and Challenges in Safe Sport Entities On March 23rd, the Athletes Network for Safer Sports held an online workshop exploring the development of ‘safe sport entities’ – organizations designed to address harassment and abuse in sport. Featuring Alison Quigley, survivor of abuse in gymnastics, safe sport advocate, researcher and founder of […]

READ MORE

Debunking the IOC FAQ

Debunking the IOC FAQ

In connection to the IOC Policy on the Protection of the Female (Women’s) Category in Olympic Sport A scientific, legal, and child safeguarding analysis from Humans of Sport May 2026 Introduction On 26 March 2026, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board adopted a new Policy on the Protection of the Female (Women’s) Category in […]

READ MORE

SAFER Handbook: Football Supporters Europe publishes project outcomes and good practices

SAFER Handbook: Football Supporters Europe publishes project outcomes and good practices

SAFER – Support & Awareness for Female fans in European football through Research, prevention, and remedy Football Supporters Europe is delighted to share the handbook from its SAFER (Support & Awareness for Female fans in European football through Research, prevention, and remedy) project. Download the SAFER handbook here. About the project SAFER, a Football Supporters Europe project supported by the […]

READ MORE

Join the Network

Sport has the potential to be a catalyst for human development, unity, and freedom, but too often it instead brings harm to its athletes, fans, and communities. We exist to uncover and rectify the many abuses that exist both in and around sport. We aim to transform sports into an authentic force for good.