International Korfball Federation
Abbreviation | IKF |
---|---|
Formation | 11 June 1933 |
Type | Federation of national associations |
Headquarters | Zeist, Netherlands |
Region served | Worldwide |
Membership | 67 national associations |
Official languages | English |
President | Jan Fransoo |
Vice-President | Frans Walvis |
Secretary General | Graham Crafter |
Main organ | IKF Executive Committee |
Affiliations | SportAccord, ARISF, IWGA |
Website |
ikf |
The International Korfball Federation (IKF) is the governing body of korfball. IKF is responsible for the organisation of korfball's major international tournaments, notably the IKF World Korfball Championship.
The IKF was founded on 11 June 1933 in Antwerp, Belgium as a continuation of the International Korfball Bureau established in 1924 by the Dutch and Belgian Associations. The headquarters is in Zeist (Netherlands). The IKF is officially recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1993 and is affiliated to SportAccord, the Association of the IOC Recognized International Sports Federations (ARISF) and the International World Games Association (IWGA).
The IKF aims to spread korfball around the globe and increase the level of play in the affiliated countries. The IKF has currently 67 member countries. It provides the affiliated countries via five Continental Confederations (Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania) with financial, material and structural support to achieve the goals. It has established a network of contacts in many countries and is constantly expanding this network.[1] IKF actively promotes the game by transferring knowledge internationally by exchange programs and inviting selected korfball players, coaches and administrators to its training courses in order to assist in the creation of a stable local organization and structure in all the affiliated countries.[2]
Structure
The IKF has 67 members at the moment. They are divided over five continental confederations for Europe, Asia, Americas, Africa and Oceanian. In 2015 the last three members were accepted: Morocco, Switzerland and Sri Lanka.[3]
Presidents
The IKF has had six presidents until now. All six have been from the Netherlands.[4]
Start | End | Name | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|
1933 | 1946 | Nico Broekhuijsen | Netherlands |
1946 | 1954 | S.A. Wilson | Netherlands |
1954 | 1964 | H.J. Venema | Netherlands |
1964 | 1981 | Herman Duns | Netherlands |
1981 | 1988 | Jo Roosenschoon | Netherlands |
1988 | 2003 | Bob de Die | Netherlands |
2003 | Jan Fransoo | Netherlands |
Council
The Council of the IKF consists of a President, a Secretary General, a Senior Vice-President, three other members of the Executive Committee and up to five Continental Vice-Presidents.
Council Member | Position | Country |
---|---|---|
Jan Fransoo | President | Netherlands |
Frank Buvens | Executive Committee Member | Belgium |
Danielle Ruts | Executive Committee Member | Belgium |
Gert Dijkstra | Special Delegate for Competitions | Netherlands |
Frans Walvis | Senior Vice-President | Netherlands |
Graham Crafter | Secretary General | England |
Les Williams | Continental Vice-President, Africa | South Africa |
Ying-Che Huang | Continental Vice-President, Asia | Chinese Taipei |
Tim Miller | Continental Vice-President, Oceania | Australia |
Vacant | Continental Vice-President, Europe | Europe |
IKF structured tournaments
National team tournaments
Club tournaments
|
National youth team tournaments
University tournaments
|
References
- ↑ "Chinezen vergapen zich aan flitsende show 'Hollandbal'". nrc.nl. 7 November 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
- ↑ "Organisation". ikf.org. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
- ↑ "Morocco, Switzerland and Sri Lanka join IKF". ikf.org. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
- ↑ "Beknopt historisch overzicht korfbal in (K)KNB/KNKV" (PDF). knkv.nl. Retrieved 3 April 2016.