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사용자:밥풀떼기/번역장3

위키백과, 우리 모두의 백과사전.

준비 과정

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유치 이후

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런던 올림픽 유치 직후 대회를 준비하는 과정에서 런던 올림픽 조직위원회 (LOCOG)가 출범되었고, 2005년 10월 3일에는 첫 위원회 회의를 했다. [1] 세바스찬 코가 위원장을 맡은 올림픽 조직위원회는 대회를 준비하고 개최하는 일을 맡았고, 올림픽조달청 (ODA)은 경기장 및 기본 시설들을 건설하는 일을 맡았다.[1] 2006년 4월에는 올림픽 조달위원회가 정식 출범하였다.[2]

문화매체체육부 (DCMS)에 속한 정부 올림픽 위원회 (GOE) 2012년 런던 올림픽의 조직을 인솔하는 정부 단체이다. 정부 올림픽 위원회는 스포츠나 올림픽 관련 정보를 문화매체체육부 사무차관을 통해 부서에 알린다. It focuses on oversight of the Games, cross-programme programme management and the London 2012 Olympic Legacy before and after the Games that will benefit London and the UK. The organisation is also responsible for the supervision of the £9.3 billion of public sector funding.[3]

In August 2011, security concerns arose surrounding the hosting of the Olympic Games in London[4] due to the 2011 England riots, with a few countries expressing fear over the safety of the Games,[5] in spite of the International Olympic Committee's assurance that the riots will not affect the Games.[6]

The IOC's Coordination Commission for the 2012 Games completed their tenth and final visit to London in March 2012. They concluded that "London is ready to host the world this summer".[7]

Venues and infrastructure

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The 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games will use a mixture of new venues, existing and historic facilities, and temporary facilities, some of them in well-known locations such as Hyde Park and Horse Guards Parade. Some of the new facilities will be reused in their Olympic form, while others will be resized or relocated.[8]

The majority of venues have been divided into three zones within Greater London: the Olympic Zone, the River Zone and the Central Zone. In addition to these are those venues that, by necessity, are outside the boundaries of Greater London, such as the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, which will host the sailing events, some 125 miles (200 km) southwest of London. The football tournament will be staged at several grounds around the UK.[9] Work began on the Park in December 2006, when a sports hall in Eton Manor was pulled down.[10] The athletes' village in Portland was completed in September 2011.[11]

In November 2004 the 500-acre Olympic Park plans were revealed.[12] The plans for the site were approved in September 2004 by Tower Hamlets, Newham, Hackney and Waltham Forest.[13] The redevelopment of the area to build the Olympic Park required compulsory purchase orders of property. The London Development Agency was in dispute with London and Continental Railways about the orders in November 2005. The LCR accused the LDA of killing off development in the area. The LDA planned to buy land alongside the Olympic Park for the Stratford City development project, bringing the 180-acre site of the former Stratford Rail Lands into a mixed-use development, including 4,500 new homes, office space, hotels and shops.[14] This resulted in 2011 with the completion of the largest urban shopping centre in Europe being operated by Westfield.[15] By May 2006, 86% of the land had been bought as businesses fought eviction; this led to an enquiry being set up. 206 companies had to relocate by July 2007.[16] In addition, residents who opposed the eviction tried to find way to stop it by setting up campaigns. However they had to leave as 94% of land was bought and the other 6% bought as a £9 billion regeneration project started.[17]

Aerial view of the Olympic Park in April 2012

However, there were some issues with the original venues not being challenging enough or being financially unviable. For example, the road racing at the Olympic Games was originally scheduled to take place in Regent's Park and on Hampstead Heath. Instead the Olympic road races will start and finish on The Mall in central London, extend into Surrey to the south and include loops around Box Hill.[18] The Olympic mountain bike event will take place at Hadleigh Farm after the event was moved from Weald Country Park,[19] after the UCI labelled the course at the park "too easy" in July 2008.[20] A location in Kent was also considered.[21]

The Olympic marathon course, which was set to finish in the Olympic stadium, was moved to The Mall.[22] The idea angered some members of the local community, who said they had been left out of the Olympics as no events would take place in the boroughs. The change was made as closing Tower Bridge would cause gridlock in central London.[23][24][25] North Greenwich Arena 2 was scrapped in a cost-cutting exercise, Wembley Arena being used for badminton and rhythmic gymnastics events instead.[26][27][28][29]

Public transport

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The Olympic Javelin service runs between St Pancras and Ebbsfleet, via Stratford

London's public transport was an element of the bid which was scored poorly in the IOC's initial evaluation; however, they felt that if the improvements were delivered in time for the Games then London would cope.[30] Transport for London (TfL) carried out numerous improvements in preparation for 2012, including the expansion of the London Overground's East London Line, upgrades to the Docklands Light Railway and the North London Line,[31] and the introduction of a new "Javelin" high-speed rail service,[32] using the Hitachi Corporation's "bullet" trains.[33] The platforms at Stratford International station (which are at a height designed for Eurostar trains) will be temporarily raised to accommodate the Javelin trains.[34] According to Network Rail, an additional 4,000 train services will run during the Games, and train operators will put on longer trains during the day.[35]

The Emirates Air Line crosses the River Thames between Greenwich Peninsula and the Royal Docks

TfL has also built a £25 million cable car across the River Thames, the Emirates Air Line, to link 2012 Olympics venues.[36] It was inaugurated in June 2012 and crosses the Thames between Greenwich Peninsula and the Royal Docks, carrying up to 2,500 passengers an hour at a heights above 50 미터 (160 ft) in the air. It is designed to cut journey times between the O2 arena and the ExCel exhibition centre – both of which are Olympic locations. The system could provide a crossing every 30 seconds.[37]

The plan is to have 80% of athletes travel less than 20 minutes to their event[38] and to have 93% of athletes within 30 minutes of their event.[39] The Olympic Park would be served by ten separate railway lines with a combined capacity of 240,000 passengers per hour.[40] In addition, the LOCOG planned for 90% of the venues to be served by three or more types of public transport.[39] Two park-and-ride sites were off the M25 with a combined capacity of 12,000 cars 25 minutes away from the Olympic Park. Another park-and-ride site was planned in Ebbsfleet which would have capacity for 9,000 cars where spectators could board a 10-minute shuttle bus.[39] To get spectators to Eton Dorney, four park-and-ride schemes were set up. Spectators would be dropped off at Windsor Racecourse with a bridge going over the Thames linking the racecourse to the rowing venue.[41]

Some lanes on some roads in London will be dedicated to athletes, officials and VIPs.[42][43]

Concerns have been expressed at the logistics of spectators travelling to the events outside London. In particular, the sailing events at Portland are in an area without direct motorway connections, and with local roads that are heavily congested by tourist traffic in the summer.[44] However, the Weymouth area did undergo a major upgrade to its road infrastructure. A £77 million relief road connecting Weymouth to Dorchester was built and opened in 2011.[45][46] Some £16 million was put aside for the rest of the improvements.[47] In addition the plans removed five roundabouts to ease congestion and replaced them with traffic lights.[48][49] But some residents were unhappy that the roundabouts were removed.[50]

FirstGroup will provide the venue shuttle and park-and-ride services, services connecting peripheral park-and-ride sites on the M25 with the Olympic Park and Ebbsfleet, and a nationwide network of express coaches to the Olympic Park and the Weymouth and Portland sailing venue. The services will require around 900 vehicles in total, although some will be sub-contracted.[51][52]

Financing

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The costs of mounting the Games are separate from those for building the venues and infrastructure, and redeveloping the land for the Olympic Park. While the Games are privately funded, the venues and Park costs are met largely by public money.

The original budget for the games was £2.4 billion, but this was increased almost fourfold to about £9.3 billion in 2007. The revised figures were announced to the House of Commons on 15 March 2007 by Tessa Jowell. Along with East End regeneration costs, the breakdown was:

Sector Cost
Building the venues and infrastructure for the Games £5.3 billion
Elite sport and Paralympic funding £400 million
Security and policing £600 million
Regeneration of the Lower Lea Valley £1.7 billion
Contingency fund £2.7 billion
VAT £800 million

Sponsors

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To help fund the cost of staging the games the London Olympic organisers have agreed partnership deals with major companies. The companies have signed up into four categories; worldwide, tier one, tier two and tier three.[53] The companies have together provided around £1.4bn of funding, allocated approximately 50-50 between the IOC and the London organisers.[54]

Volunteers

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Unpaid volunteers known as Games Makers will perform a variety of tasks before and during the Games.[55] A target of 70,000 volunteers was set as early as 2004.[56] When recruitment took place in 2010, over 240,000 applications were received.[57] Sebastian Coe said in February 2012, "Our Games Makers will contribute a total of around eight million volunteer hours during the Games and the Games simply wouldn't happen without them".[58]

Ticketing

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Organisers estimated that some 8 million tickets would be available for the Olympic Games,[59] and 1.5 million tickets for the Paralympic Games.[59][60] It is estimated that 82% of available Olympic tickets and 63% of Paralympic tickets will be sold. LOCOG aims to raise £375–£400 million in ticket sales. There will also be free events: for example, the marathon, triathlon and road cycling,[61] although, for the first time in Olympic history, the sailing events will be ticketed.[62] Tickets for the London Prepares series, the Olympic test events, started to go on sale in May 2011.[63] To reduce congestion, ticket holders are entitled to free use of London's public transport network on the day of the event.[64]

Following IOC rules, people applied for tickets from the NOC of their country of residence. European Union residents were able to apply for tickets in any EU country.[65]

In Great Britain, ticket prices range from £20 for many events to £2,012 for the most expensive seats at the opening ceremony. Free tickets were given to military personnel, and children were invited to win tickets.[66] Free tickets were also given to the survivors and families of those who died during 7 July 2005 London bombings.[67] Initially, people were able to apply for tickets via a website from 15 March 2011 until 26 April 2011. There was a huge demand for tickets, with 1.8 million people applying for 20 million tickets – three times the 6.6 million tickets available in the first round lot, with 95% of the applications from Great Britain. More than 50% of the sessions went to a random ballot.[68][69] Over half the people who applied got no tickets, and the process was widely criticised, one consumer group questioning the point of taking money out of people's bank accounts before they knew which tickets they had successfully purchased,[70] and triple Olympic Champion Bradley Wiggins labelling the process a shambles.[71] However, Lord Coe and the LOCOG insisted that the process was fair, and that there was no perfect system.[72]

On 11 May 2012 a round of nearly one million "second chance" tickets went on sale.[73][74] There was a second round of ticket sales for events that failed to sell out in the initial allocation.[75] This took place over a 10-day period between 23 June and 3 July 2011, with priority given to those who were unsuccessful in the first allocation process. At this point there were about 1.7 million tickets for football and 600,000 for other sports, including archery, hockey, football, judo, boxing and volleyball, among other sports with 1.5 million tickets priced between £20 and £50. Because so many people were buying tickets and because the Ticketmaster website did not update immediately, 15,000 had their application rejected, but 90% of people did get some tickets; some events sold out in 15 minutes, and by 8 am, ten sports had sold out.[76] People who were successful in the first round of tickets were allowed to buy more during the period 8–17 July 2011. By this point 1.5 million tickets were available for football, 40,000 for volleyball and 8,000 for freestyle wrestling on a first-come-first-served basis. However, by 10 July all the tickets for volleyball had been sold, as 3.5 million tickets had been sold in total.

In Russia people bought "Olympic vouchers" which one would have to redeem in London during July and August 2012, with people making their own accommodation and travel arrangements.[77] In Brazil, the ticket website and payment system did not work properly for the first three and a half days.[78] The British government was also asked to explain why it bought 9,000 tickets.[79]

Countdown

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The Countdown Clock in Trafalgar Square

During the closing ceremony of the 2008 Olympics, the Olympic Flag was formally handed over from the Mayor of Beijing to the Mayor of London. This was followed by a section highlighting London,[80] One month later, the Olympic and Paralympic flags were raised outside the London City Hall[81]

A countdown clock in Trafalgar Square was unveiled, 500 days before the games.[82] The clock broke down the following day. The same location hosted one of a number of events to mark a year before the games.[83] Final countdown to the start of this year's summer games in London has begun with the ceremony of lighting of Olympic flame in Ancient Olympia in Greece.[84]

Security

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The security operation is led by the police, with 10,000 officers available, supported by 13,500 members of the armed forces. Naval and air assets, including ships situated in the Thames, Eurofighter jets and surface-to-air missiles, will be deployed as part of the security operation. The cost of security has also increased from £282 million to £553 million. This will be the biggest security operation Britain has faced for decades. The figure of 13,500 armed forces personnel is more than Britain currently has deployed in Afghanistan.[85] The Metropolitan Police and the Royal Marines carried out security exercises in preparation for the Olympics on 19 January 2012, with 50 marine police officers in rigid inflatables and fast response boats, joined by up to 100 military personnel and a Lynx Navy helicopter.[86]

The Ministry of Defence distributed leaflets to residents of the Lexington building in Bow, announcing that a missile system was to be stationed on top of the water tower.[87][88] This caused concern to some residents.[87][88] The Ministry said it probably would use Starstreak missiles and that site evaluations had taken place, but that no final decision had taken place.[87][88]

It emerged in July 2012 that G4S, the firm responsible for supplying security staff for the Olympics, had been unable to recruit enough, so the shortfall would have to be made up by 3500 UK military servicepeople. There were also media reports that G4S had failed to respond to people applying for jobs as security staff, that recruits were inadequately trained, that some were teenagers, and that some could not speak English well enough.

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There have been two London 2012 logos: one for the bidding process created by Kino Design and a second as the brand for the Games themselves. The former is a ribbon with blue, yellow, black, green and red stripes winding through the text "LONDON 2012," making the shape of the River Thames in East London. The latter, designed by Wolff Olins, was unveiled on 4 June 2007 and cost £400,000.[89] This new logo is a representation of the number 2012, with the Olympic Rings embedded within the zero.[90]

The Paralympics logo (far left) and the different official colour combinations for the Wolff Olins main logo design

This will be the first time that the same essential logo is to be used for both the Olympic and Paralympic games.[91]

The standard colours are green, magenta, orange and blue; however, the logo has incorporated a variety of colours, including the Union Flag to promote the handover ceremony.[92] The flexibility of the logo has enabled sponsors to incorporate their corporate colours into a personalised version, such as Lloyds TSB,[93] British Airways[94] and Adidas.[95]

London 2012 has stated that the new logo is aimed at reaching young people. Sebastian Coe stated that it builds upon everything that the organising committee has said "about reaching out and engaging young people, which is where our challenge is over the next five years." One observer, a managing director of an advertising agency, noted that the logo bore a strong resemblance to the logo for the 1974–1982 children's television programme Tiswas, commenting that appealing to young people is difficult, and that they will see right through attempts to patronise them.[96]

Early public reaction to the logo, as measured by a poll on the BBC website, was largely negative: more than 80% of votes gave the logo the lowest possible rating.[97] Several newspapers have run their own logo competitions, displaying alternative submissions from their readers. The Sun displayed a design by a macaque monkey.[98] It was suggested that the logo resembles the cartoon character Lisa Simpson performing fellatio[99] and others have complained that it looks like a distorted swastika.[100] In February 2011, Iran complained that the logo appeared to spell out the word "Zion" and threatened to boycott the Olympics.[101] Iran submitted its complaint to the International Olympic Committee, describing the logo as racist, asking that it be withdrawn and the designers be confronted. The IOC quietly rejected the demands, and Iran announced it would not boycott the Games.[102] Claire Stocks, a blogger for the BBC, commented that "London 2012's new logo has got the country talking [although] not in the manner the organisers would have hoped".[103]

A segment of animated footage released at the same time as the logo was reported to trigger seizures in a small number of people with photosensitive epilepsy. The charity Epilepsy Action received telephone calls from people who claimed to have had seizures after watching the sequence on TV. In response, a short segment was removed from the London 2012 website.[104] Ken Livingstone, then London Mayor, said that the company who designed the film should not be paid for what he called a "catastrophic mistake."[105]

Mascots

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The official mascots for the 2012 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games were unveiled on 19 May 2010;[106] this marks the second time (after Vancouver) that both Olympic and Paralympic mascots were unveiled at the same time. Wenlock and Mandeville are animations depicting two drops of steel from a steelworks in Bolton.[106] They are named Wenlock, after the Shropshire town of Much Wenlock, which held a forerunner of the current Olympic Games, and Mandeville, after Stoke Mandeville, a village in Buckinghamshire where a forerunner to the Paralympic Games were first held.[106] The writer Michael Morpurgo wrote the story concept to the mascots, and an animation was produced;[107] it is intended that this will form part of an ongoing series concerning the mascots in the run-up to the Games in 2012.[106] Two stories have been created about the mascots: Out Of A Rainbow, the story of how Wenlock and Mandeville came to be, and Adventures On A Rainbow, which features the children from Out Of A Rainbow meeting the mascots and trying out many different Olympic and Paralympic sports.[108]

Medals

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Approximately 4,700[109] Olympic and Paralympic medals have been produced by the Royal Mint.[110] They were designed by David Watkins (Olympics) and Lin Cheung (Paralympics).[111] Each medal weighs 375–400g, has a diameter of 85mm and is 7mm thick, with the sport and discipline engraved on the rim.[112] The obverse, as is traditional, features Nike, the Greek goddess of victory, stepping from the Parthenon; the reverse features the Games logo, the River Thames and a series of lines representing "the energy of athletes and a sense of pulling together".[113] The medals were transferred to the Tower of London vaults on 2 July 2012 for storage.[112]

Test events

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Many test events will be held throughout 2011 and 2012, either through an existing championship such as 2012 Wimbledon Championships or as a specially created event held under the banner of London Prepares. Some events are closed to the public, others are ticketed. Basketball and BMX were the first events to be tested within the Olympic Park.[114]

Torch relay

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The torch relay in Newport, Isle of Wight

The Olympics torch relay runs from 19 May to 27 July 2012, before the games. Plans for the relay were developed in 2010–11, with the torch-bearer selection process announced on 18 May 2011.[115] The Olympic Flame arrived on flight BA2012 on 18 May 2012 from Greece.[116] The relay will last 70 days, with 66 evening celebrations and six island visits, involving about 8,000 people carrying the torch a distance of about 8,000 miles (12,800 km), starting from Land's End in Cornwall.[117] The torch had one day outside of the United Kingdom when it visited Dublin on 6 June.[118] The relay is focusing on National Heritage Sites, locations and venues with sporting significance, key sporting events, schools registered with the Get Set School Network, green spaces and biodiversity, Live Sites (city locations with large screens), festivals and other events.[119]

Opening ceremony

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The Opening ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics will be held on 27 July 2012 and be called "The Isles of Wonder".[120] Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle will be the artistic director for the opening ceremony and the music directors will be Rick Smith and Karl Hyde of the electronic music duo Underworld.[121]

The games will be officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.[122] A short film starring Daniel Craig as secret agent James Bond will be screened during the television coverage of the ceremony.[123] Sir Paul McCartney has announced he will perform at the end of the ceremony.[124]

Closing ceremony

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The closing ceremony of the London 2012 Summer Olympics will start on 12 August 2012. The ceremony will include a handover by Boris Johnson, Mayor of London, to Eduardo Paes, Mayor of Rio de Janeiro, the host city of 2016 Summer Olympics.[125]

The Games

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Participants

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Team sizes

Over 10,000 athletes from 204 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) are expected to participate,[126] surpassing the 1948 Summer Olympics in London and the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester as the largest multi-sport event ever to be held in the United Kingdom.[127]

The Netherlands Antilles Olympic Committee, which had planned to continue functioning after the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles, had its membership withdrawn by the IOC Executive Committee at the IOC session of June 2011. However, Dutch Antillean athletes who qualify for the 2012 Olympics will be allowed to participate independently under the Olympic flag. As South Sudan has no recognized NOC, South Sudanese track and field athlete Guor Marial will also be participating independently in the Games.[128]

There were initial concerns about Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Brunei not sending any female athletes to the games: nevertheless, the Saudi team eventually sent two women.[129][130]

Sports

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The 2012 Summer Olympic programme features 26 sports and a total of 39 disciplines:

For the first time, women's boxing is included in the programme, with 36 athletes competing in three different weight classes. There is a special dispensation to allow the various shooting events to go ahead, which would otherwise be illegal under UK gun law. In Tennis, mixed doubles returns to the Olympic programme for the first time since 1924[338]

London's bid featured 28 sports, in line with other recent Summer Olympics, but the IOC voted to drop baseball and softball from the 2012 Games two days after it selected London as the host city. The IOC reinforced its decision to drop both sports during the 2006 Winter Olympics, after they lost votes for reconsideration, and were last scheduled for a Games at the 2008 Olympics.[339] Following the decision to drop the two sports, the IOC held a vote on whether or not to replace them. The sports considered were karate, squash, golf, roller sports and rugby sevens. Karate and squash were the two final nominees, but neither received enough votes to reach the required two-thirds majority.[339]

Even though formal demonstration sports were eliminated following the 1992 Summer Olympics,[340] special tournaments for non-Olympic sports can be run during the games, such as the Wushu tournament at the 2008 Summer Olympics.[341] There were attempts to run Twenty20 cricket,[341] and Netball[342] tournaments parallel with the 2012 games, but neither campaign was successful.

Calendar

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The final official schedule was released on 15 February 2011.[343] 틀:2012 Summer Olympics calendar


방송

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지상파

  • KBS1 (아날로그 채널 9번, 디지털 채널 9-1번)
  • KBS2 (아날로그 채널 7번, 디지털 채널 7-1번)
  • MBC (아날로그 채널 11번, 디지털 채널 11-1번)
  • SBS (아날로그 채널 13번, 디지털 채널 6-1번)

케이블/위성/IPTV

  • KBS N Sports (아날로그 채널 51번, 디지털SD 채널 26번, 디지털HD 채널 211번)
  • MBC SPORTS+ (아날로그 채널 52번, 디지털SD 채널 27번, 디지털HD 채널 212번)
  • SBS ESPN (아날로그 채널 53번, 디지털SD 채널 28번, 디지털HD 채널 213번)

- TCN 대구방송 기준

- 전 경기 HD 생중계 예정

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  3. “2012 Olympic Games & Paralympic Games”. Department for Culture, Media and Sport. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  4. Macur, Juliet; Pfanner, Eric (2011년 8월 9일). “London Rioting Prompts Fears Over Soccer and Olympics”. 《The New York Times》. 2011년 8월 11일에 확인함. 
  5. Foster, Peter (2011년 8월 9일). “London riots: China raises questions over safety of 2012 Olympic Games”. 《The Daily Telegraph》 (London). 2011년 8월 11일에 확인함. 
  6. Jackson, Jamie (2011년 8월 9일). “London riots will not affect 2012 Olympic security, says IOC”. 《The Guardian》 (London). 2011년 8월 11일에 확인함. 
  7. “London is ready to host the Olympic Games as excitement builds”. Olympic.org. 2012년 4월 13일에 확인함. 
  8. “London 2012”. Excel London. 2005년 7월 6일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
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  10. “Work begins on 2012 Olympic Park”. BBC News. 2006년 12월 14일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  11. “Osprey Quay Olympic village topping out ceremony”. BBC News. 2011년 9월 13일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  12. “London reveals Olympic Park plans”. BBC Sport. 2004년 11월 8일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  13. “2012 Olympic Park gets go ahead”. BBC News. 2004년 9월 9일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  14. “Olympic Park land row rumbles on”. BBC News. 2005년 11월 4일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  15. “Westfield Stratford City shopping centre opens”. BBC News. 2011년 9월 13일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  16. “Probe into Olympic land evictions”. BBC News. 2006년 5월 9일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  17. Assistant Producer, Building the Olympic Dream (2009년 3월 11일). “Stratford's last stand”. BBC Sport. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  18. “Road cycling”. London2012. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  19. “Essex venue to host 2012 biking”. BBC Sport. 2008년 8월 11일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  20. “Mountain bike course 'too easy'. BBC Sport. 2008년 2월 1일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  21. Bingham, Keith (2008년 8월 15일). “Lord Coe selects Hadleigh in Essex as 2012 Olympic mtb venue”. 《Cycling Weekly》 (Croydon). 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  22. “2012 Olympics: Bid to move marathon finish to the Mall”. BBC News. 2010년 9월 16일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
  23. “2012 Olympics: Bid to change marathon route criticised”. BBC News. 2010년 9월 22일. 2011년 10월 15일에 확인함. 
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  158. “Virgin Islands, British - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  160. “Bulgaria - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  162. “Burundi - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  163. “Cambodia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  165. “Canada - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  166. “Cape Verde - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  167. “Cayman Islands - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  170. “Chile - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  171. “People's Republic of China - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  174. “Congo - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  175. “Democratic Republic of the Congo - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  176. “Cook Islands - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  177. “Costa Rica - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  178. “Ivory Coast - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  179. “Croatia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  180. “Cuba - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  182. “Czech Republic - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  199. “Georgia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  200. “Germany - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
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  203. “Greece - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  204. “Grenada - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  205. “Guam - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  206. “Guatemala - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  207. “Guinea - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  208. “Guinea-Bissau - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  209. “Guyana - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  210. “Haiti - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  211. “Honduras - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  212. “Hong Kong, China - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  213. “Hungary - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  214. “Iceland - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  215. “Independent Olympic Athletes - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  216. “IOC Executive Board meets ahead of London Games”. Olympic.org. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  217. “India - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  218. “Indonesia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  219. “Islamic Republic of Iran - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  220. “Iraq - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  221. “Ireland - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  222. “Israel - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  223. Originally Israel had 38 participating athletes but it reduced after swimmer Jonatan Kopelev which qualified for the Olympics had to cancel his participation after removal of his appendix two weeks before the Olympics.
  224. “Italy - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  225. “Jamaica - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  226. “Japan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  227. “Jordan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  228. “Kazakhstan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  229. “Kenya - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  230. “Kiribati - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  231. “Democratic People's Republic of Korea - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  232. “Republic of Korea - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  233. “Kuwait to compete at Games under own flag”. 《Gulf Daily News》. 2012년 7월 16일. 2012년 7월 23일에 확인함. 
  234. “Kyrgyzstan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  235. “Lao People's Democratic Republic - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  236. “Latvia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  237. “Lebanon - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  238. “Lesotho - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  239. “Liberia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  240. “Libya - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  241. “Liechtenstein - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  242. “Lithuania - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  243. “Luxembourg - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  244. “Former Rep. of Macedonia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  245. “Madagascar - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  246. “Malawi - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  247. “Malaysia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  248. “Maldives - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  249. “Mali - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  250. “Malta - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  251. “Marshall Islands - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  252. “Mauritania - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  253. “Mauritius - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  254. “Mexico - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  255. “Federated States of Micronesia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  256. “Republic of Moldova - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  257. “Monaco - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  258. “Mongolia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  259. “Montenegro - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  260. “Morocco - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  261. “Mozambique - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  262. “Myanmar - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  263. “Namibia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  264. “Nauru - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  265. “Nepal - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  266. “Netherlands - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  267. “New Zealand - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  268. “Nicaragua - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  269. “Niger - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  270. “Nigeria - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  271. “Norway - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  272. “Oman - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  273. “Pakistan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  274. “Palau - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  275. “Palestine - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  276. “Panama - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  277. “Papua New Guinea - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  278. “Paraguay - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  279. “Peru - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  280. “Philippines - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  281. “Poland - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  282. “Portugal - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  283. “Puerto Rico - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  284. “Qatar - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  285. “Romania - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  286. “Russian Federation - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  287. “Rwanda - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  288. “Saint Kitts and Nevis - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  289. “Saint Lucia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  290. “Saint Vincent and the Grenadines - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  291. “Samoa - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  292. “San Marino - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  293. “Sao Tome and Principe - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  294. “Saudi Arabia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  295. “Senegal - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  296. “Serbia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  297. “Seychelles - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  298. “Sierra Leone - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  299. “Singapore - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  300. “Slovakia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  301. “Slovenia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  302. “Solomon Islands - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  303. “Somalia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  304. “South Africa - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  305. “Spain - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  306. “Sri Lanka - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  307. “Sudan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  308. “Suriname - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  309. “Swaziland - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  310. “Sweden - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  311. “Switzerland - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  312. “Syrian Arab Republic - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  313. “Chinese Taipei - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  314. “Tajikistan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  315. “United Republic of Tanzania - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  316. “Thailand - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  317. “Democratic Republic of Timor Leste - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  318. “Togo - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  319. “Tonga - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  320. “Trinidad and Tobago - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  321. “Tunisia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  322. “Turkey - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  323. “Turkmenistan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  324. “Tuvalu - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  325. “Uganda - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  326. “Ukraine - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  327. “United Arab Emirates - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  328. “United States of America - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  329. “Uruguay - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  330. “Uzbekistan - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  331. “Vanuatu - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  332. “Venezuela - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  333. “Vietnam - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  334. “Virgin Islands, US - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  335. “Yemen - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  336. “Zambia - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  337. “Zimbabwe - 2012 Olympic Athletes”. London 2012. 2012년 7월 21일에 확인함. 
  338. Tennis: Mixed Doubles Preview NBCOlympics
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  340. “International Olympic Committee – Olympic Games”. Olympic.org. 2008년 9월 12일에 보존된 문서. 2008년 10월 12일에 확인함. 
  341. Dipankar De Sarkar (2008년 8월 6일). “London legislator heads for Beijing, wants cricket in 2012 Olympics”. Thaindian News. 2008년 8월 15일에 보존된 문서. 2008년 8월 20일에 확인함. 
  342. “Gordon Brown backs Olympic netball”. 《Daily Express》. UK. 2008년 2월 20일. 2008년 9월 28일에 보존된 문서. 2008년 9월 10일에 확인함. 
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