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2026 FIFA World Cup
6JUN

Host committees skip human rights plans

3 min read
12:17UTC

Three months before kickoff, most US host committees have not produced the human rights assessments FIFA's own framework demands — and FIFA itself has dropped anti-discrimination messaging.

SportAssessed
Key takeaway

FIFA created human rights rules under Qatar pressure, then stopped enforcing them for the United States.

Human Rights Watch published "Keep the World in the World Cup" on 12 March, reporting that most of the 16 US host committees have not released the Human Rights Action Plans required under FIFA's hosting framework 1. The report also documented FIFA's decision to cancel anti-discrimination messaging for the tournament — a programme that had been a visible fixture at previous World Cups.

FIFA adopted its human rights policy in 2017 after sustained pressure over labour deaths in Qatar's stadium construction programme and restrictions on civil liberties in Russia before the 2018 tournament. The policy drew on the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, authored by Harvard professor John Ruggie, who advised FIFA on the framework before his death in 2021. Host cities are required to produce action plans identifying risks to workers, fans, journalists, and local populations, with mitigation measures and public accountability mechanisms.

With the tournament opening on 11 June, the compliance gap is measurable. Most host committees have produced no public documentation of the assessments they committed to. The cancellation of anti-discrimination messaging is a separate decision by FIFA itself — not the host committees — and removes visible institutional backing for the non-discrimination pledges central to the 2017 policy. Taken together, the two failures suggest the human rights framework functions as a reputational shield during the bidding phase and loses binding force once commercial operations begin.

The 2026 context makes the gap more consequential than in previous cycles. The primary host nation's government has enacted a travel ban barring fans from four qualified nations, expanded immigration enforcement operations, and presided over a rollback of LGBTQ+ protections at federal and state level — precisely the policy areas the action plans were designed to assess and mitigate. Human Rights Watch's report does not accuse FIFA of bad faith; it asks a narrower question: whether a framework the organisation built, promoted, and claimed as a reform legacy has any enforcement mechanism at all.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When FIFA awarded the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, international criticism of Qatar's treatment of migrant workers forced FIFA to create formal human rights requirements. Host countries and their city committees must publish plans explaining how they will protect people's rights during the tournament. Human Rights Watch found that most US host committees have not published these plans — and separately, FIFA has cancelled the anti-discrimination messaging it normally runs at tournaments. In short, rules FIFA created under public pressure are now going unenforced for a politically connected host.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The combination of host committee non-compliance, FIFA's cancellation of anti-discrimination messaging, and the Infantino ethics complaint indicates that FIFA's human rights architecture is being systematically dismantled through inaction rather than formal repeal — a technique that avoids the reputational cost of visibly reversing policy while achieving the same effect.

Root Causes

FIFA's Human Rights Policy lacks an enforcement mechanism with real consequences — it relies on host committee self-reporting and voluntary compliance. The cancellation of anti-discrimination messaging suggests a deliberate policy decision at FIFA executive level, potentially linked to the US political environment or sponsor preferences. Without an independent monitoring body authorised to sanction host committees, the framework is structurally performative.

Escalation

The FairSquare ethics complaint against Infantino (event 23) and this HRW report together create a compound accountability pressure point. If the ethics complaint advances to a formal FIFA investigation before the Congress on 30 April, FIFA may simultaneously have to defend both Infantino's conduct and the host committees' non-compliance — a reputational double-exposure that its communications operation is not currently structured to manage.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    FIFA sponsors subject to EU mandatory ESG reporting could face shareholder pressure to reconsider or condition their World Cup associations if non-compliance with human rights plans becomes publicly documented.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    The absence of Human Rights Action Plans leaves FIFA legally exposed if a rights incident occurs at a US venue and affected parties demonstrate no protective framework existed.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If FIFA's human rights requirements go unenforced for a G7 host, the policy's credibility as a genuine condition of future World Cup bids is permanently damaged.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    FIFA's cancellation of anti-discrimination messaging, read alongside event 23, indicates the organisation is actively aligning its public communications with the political preferences of the current US administration.

    Immediate · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #1 · Iran splits on World Cup boycott

Human Rights Watch· 22 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Host committees skip human rights plans
Concrete compliance failure in FIFA's post-Qatar human rights framework, with most US host committees producing none of the required action plans while FIFA simultaneously cancels anti-discrimination messaging.
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA remains publicly silent on every open dispute touching the tournament: no response to the UNITE HERE ICE-moratorium demand since April, no on-record comment on the Iran visa reversal, no intervention on the FIGC election. Its governance architecture, which routes bilateral matters to governments and domestic federation matters to national bodies, structurally precludes a direct answer on all three.
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
Andrea Abodi / Italian Sports Ministry
Abodi's ANAC referral is the first formal institutional step in his challenge to Malagò, converting a legal argument into a timed procedural clock, with both bodies reportedly receiving the request with "considerable frustration". The 15 June deadline means Italy's federation crisis will peak mid-tournament regardless of the ruling's direction.
Mauricio Pochettino / USMNT
Mauricio Pochettino / USMNT
Pochettino confirmed the 4-3-3 with Reyna and Pulisic starting against Germany, resolving the formation question at the cost of a 3-1 defeat that exposed the defensive axis. His public frustration over Richards's fitness, "I got a little annoyed", frames the 11 June deadline as an emotional as well as a tactical decision.
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
FFIRI / Mehdi Taj
FFIRI confirmed the squad's clearance but stated five federation staffers were blocked under a "false pretences" finding, and denied separately reported player rejections, insisting the playing group travels intact. Taj's 5 June deadline expired; the approval arrived the same day, meeting the form of the demand while leaving the delegation short.
US State Department / UNITE HERE Local 11
US State Department / UNITE HERE Local 11
Unnamed US officials approved Iran's squad visas via Ankara without a formal State Department statement, leaving Taremi's individual file unconfirmed; at the same venue system, UNITE HERE Local 11's 96% strike mandate among 2,000 SoFi workers, following FIFA's silence since 7 April, means US immigration enforcement runs as two parallel pressure tracks through the opener.
France (FFF)
France (FFF)
Manager Didier Deschamps confirmed William Saliba will play, reversing the 'very doubtful' briefing from earlier in the week and deferring any surgery until after the tournament. France recovers its first-choice central defender for the group stage at a point when rivals were adjusting their tactical assessments.