INTERNATIONAL PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) is the international representative organisation of elite sports for athletes with disabilities. IPC organises, supervises and co-ordinates the Paralympic Games and other multi-disability competitions on elite sports level, of which the most important are world and regional championships. It is an international non-profit organisation formed and run by 160 National Paralympic Committees and 5 disability specific international sports federations.
Whereas other international sports organisations for athletes with a disability are either limited to one disability group or to one specific sport, the IPC - as an umbrella organisation - represents all sports and disabilities .The national sports organisations, which created IPC are convinced that the future of disability sport lies in bringing together athletes with different handicaps to hold joint competitions.
For more information on IPC visit their Website
HISTORY OF THE PARALYMPIC GAMES
Great Britain can boast that proud heritage for the Paralympic Games and over 50 years ago Dr Ludwig Guttmann, an eminent neurologist, began using sport as part of the rehabilitation of spinal cord injured patients from the Second World War at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury, England.
In 1948 Guttmann initiated a competition between sports clubs and other hospitals to coincide with the 1948 Olympic Games being held in London that year. Since that time the Games have developed beyond the initially exclusive participation of the spinally injured to incorporate many different types of disability.
Nowadays both Summer and Winter Paralympic Games are the pinnacle for international competitions for world class athletes with a disability. Linked to the Olympic Games the Paralympics are held every two years and athletes must meet strict qualifying standards in order to compete.
At the Paralympic Games in Sydney, in 2000, four thousand athletes participated from 125 countries.
Summer Games Venues
Beijing 2008
Athens 2004
Sydney 2000
Atlanta 1996
Barcelona 1992
Seoul 1988
Stoke Mandeville 1984
New York 1984
Winter Games Venues
Turin 2006
Salt Lake City 2002
Nagano 1998
Lillehammer 1994
Tignes 1992
Innsbruck 1988
Innsbrck 1984
Geilo 1980
Omskoldsvik 1976