World Judo Championships

The World Judo Championships are the highest level of international judo competition, next to the quadrennial judo events at the Summer Olympic Games. The world championships are held by the International Judo Federation annually, except the calendar years of the Summer Olympics. Qualified judoka compete in their respective categories as representatives of their home countries. Team fixtures have also been held since 1994. The men's championships first took place in 1956, though the format and periodicity of the competition have changed over time. The last edition of the World Judo Championships (2025) was held in Budapest, Hungary.

World Judo Championships
Current event or competition:
2026 World Judo Championships
Competition details
DisciplineJudo
TypeAnnual
OrganiserInternational Judo Federation (IJF)
History
First edition1956 in Tokyo, Japan
Editions38 men (2025)
29 women (2025)
Most wins Japan – 432 medals
(186 gold medals)
Most recentBudapest 2025
Next editionBaku 2026

History

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The first World Judo Champion, Shokichi Natsui in 1956

The first edition of the world championships took place in Tokyo, Japan in 1956. There were no weight classes at the time and Japanese judoka Shokichi Natsui became the first world champion in history, defeating fellow countryman Yoshihiko Yoshimatsu in the final. The second world championship was also held in Tokyo two years later, with the Japanese winning the top two spots in the competition for the second time. In 1961, the championship was held outside Japan for the first time, and Dutch judoka Anton Geesink defeated the prior world champion, Koji Sone, in Paris, France, to become the first non-Japanese world champion.

The 1965 World Judo Championships were held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and weight classes were implemented for the first time with the addition of the −68 kg, −80 kg, and +80 kg categories. Judo had become an Olympic sport at the 1964 Summer Olympics held in Tokyo initially for men, and a permanent sport after a brief absence at the 1968 Summer Olympics.

Despite this progressive enlargement, it took until 1980 for women to participate in the world championships. The first women's world championships were held in New York City in 1980, and were held in alternating years as the men's championships until the 1987 World Judo Championships in Essen, where the two competitions were merged into one world championship. The mixed championships have been held biannually since 1987. On the Commonwealth Games side, Judo was added to the Commonwealth Games programme, initially as an optional sport for the first three editions in 1990, 2002 and 2014 but it is now a core sport from 2022 onwards. The women’s judo was included at the 1992 Summer Olympics. In 2005, the world championships made its debut on the African continent in Cairo, Egypt. In the International Judo Federation meeting held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 2007 (during the 2007 World Judo Championships), it was decided that France would host the world championships for the fifth time in 2011.

Weight classes

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There are currently 16 tournaments in the world championships, with 8 weight classes for each gender.

Competitions by year

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The world championships have been held on every continent except Antarctica.

Men's competitions

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Number Year Dates City and host country Venue # Countries # Athletes Ref.
1 1956 3 May Japan Tokyo, Japan Kuramae Kokugikan 21 31 [1][2]
2 1958 30 November Japan Tokyo, Japan Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium 18 39 [3][4]
3 1961 2 December France Paris, France Stade Pierre de Coubertin 25 57 [5][6]
4 1965 14–17 October Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Maracanãzinho 42 150 [7][8]
5 1967 9–11 August United States Salt Lake City, United States University of Utah 25 115 [9][10]
6 1969 23–25 October Mexico Mexico City, Mexico Palacio de los Deportes 39 187 [11][12]
7 1971 2–4 September West Germany Ludwigshafen, West Germany Friedrich-Ebert-Halle 52 310 [13][14]
8 1973 22–24 June Switzerland Lausanne, Switzerland Palais de Beaulieu 50 288 [15][16]
9 1975 23–25 October Austria Vienna, Austria Wiener Stadthalle 46 274 [17][18]
1977 19–24 September Spain Barcelona, Spain Palau dels Esports Cancelled [a]
10 1979 6–9 December France Paris, France Stade Pierre de Coubertin 54 273 [20][21]
11 1981 3–6 September Netherlands Maastricht, Netherlands Euro Hall 51 255 [22][23]
12 1983 13–16 October Soviet Union Moscow, Soviet Union Lenin Palace of Sports 44 226 [24][25]
13 1985 26–29 September South Korea Seoul, South Korea Jamsil Arena 39 189 [26][27]

Women's competitions

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Number Year Dates City and host country Venue # Countries # Athletes Ref.
1 1980 29–30 November United States New York, United States Madison Square Garden 27 149 [28][29]
2 1982 4–5 December France Paris, France Stade Pierre de Coubertin 35 174 [30][31]
3 1984 10–11 November Austria Vienna, Austria Wiener Stadthalle 32 183 [32][33]
4 1986 24–26 October Netherlands Maastricht, Netherlands Geusselt Sports Hall 35 162 [34][35]

Mixed competitions

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Number M/W Year Dates City and host country Venue # Countries # Athletes Ref.
14/5 1987 19–22 November Germany Essen, West Germany Grugahalle 63 456 [36][37]
15/6 1989 10–15 October Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belgrade, Yugoslavia Pionir Hall 63 355 [38][39]
16/7 1991 25–28 July Spain Barcelona, Spain Palau Blaugrana 64 465 [40][41]
17/8 1993 30 September – 3 October Canada Hamilton, Canada Copps Coliseum 79 508 [42][43]
18/9 1995 28 September – 1 October Japan Chiba, Japan Makuhari Messe 100 627 [44][45]
19/10 1997 9–12 October France Paris, France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy 91 585 [46][47]
20/11 1999 7–10 October United Kingdom Birmingham, United Kingdom National Indoor Arena 91 619 [48][49]
21/12 2001 26–29 July Germany Munich, Germany Olympiahalle 89 586 [50][51]
22/13 2003 11–14 September Japan Osaka, Japan Osaka-jō Hall 100 631 [52][53]
23/14 2005 8–11 September Egypt Cairo, Egypt Cairo Stadium Indoor Halls Complex 93 579 [54][55]
24/15 2007 13–16 September Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil HSBC Arena 139 743 [56][57]
25/16 2009 27–30 August Netherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands Rotterdam Ahoy 97 538 [58][59]
26/17 2010 9–13 September Japan Tokyo, Japan Yoyogi National Gymnasium 112 847 [60][61]
27/18 2011 23–28 August France Paris, France Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy 131 864 [62][63]
28/19 2013 26 August – 1 September Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Maracanãzinho 123 673 [64][65]
29/20 2014 25–31 August Russia Chelyabinsk, Russia Traktor Arena 110 637 [66][67]
30/21 2015 24–30 August Kazakhstan Astana, Kazakhstan Alau Ice Palace 120 723 [68][69]
31/22 2017 28 August – 3 September Hungary Budapest, Hungary László Papp Budapest Sports Arena 126 728 [70][71]
32/23 2018 20–27 September Azerbaijan Baku, Azerbaijan National Gymnastics Arena 124 755 [72][73]
33/24 2019 25 August – 1 September Japan Tokyo, Japan Nippon Budokan 143 828 [74][75]
34/25 2021 6–13 June Hungary Budapest, Hungary László Papp Budapest Sports Arena 118 661 [76][77][78]
35/26 2022 6–13 October Uzbekistan Tashkent, Uzbekistan Humo Ice Dome 82 571 [79][80]
36/27 2023 7–14 May Qatar Doha, Qatar Ali Bin Hamad al-Attiyah Arena 99 657 [81][82]
37/28 2024 19–24 May United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates Mubadala Arena 107 658 [83][84]
38/29 2025 13–20 June Hungary Budapest, Hungary László Papp Budapest Sports Arena 93 556 [85][86]
39/30 2026 4–11 October Azerbaijan Baku, Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev Arena [87][88]
40/31 2027 Kazakhstan Kazakhstan [89]
  1. The 1977 Championships were canceled due to the refusal of the host country officials to allow the Taiwanese national team to compete under the national flag of the Republic of China, thereby denying them visas. Taiwan appealed the decision of the Spanish officials to the International Judo Federation, who considered the position of the Taiwanese side to be fair and decided to cancel the 1977 Championships due to an unresolved political conflict.[19]

Openweight competitions

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Number Year Dates City and host country Venue # Countries # Athletes Ref.
1 2008 20–21 December France Levallois-Perret, France Marcel Cerdan Palace of Sports 18 51 [90][91]
2009 Cancelled
2 2011 29–30 October Russia Tyumen, Russia Judo Centre 22 49 [92][93]
3 2017 11–12 November Morocco Marrakesh, Morocco Palais des Congrès 28 58 [94][95]

Medal tables

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Men's medal count – individual events (1956–2025)

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Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Japan1086067235
2 France25182871
3 South Korea2584780
4 Soviet Union11123356
5 Georgia10152550
6 Netherlands8111938
7 Russia7142748
8 Germany561223
9 Uzbekistan541019
10Brazil Brazil481628
11 Poland421420
12 Azerbaijan361726
13 Cuba36918
14 Great Britain341320
15 East Germany331420
16 Mongolia331218
17 Spain32510
18 Greece3216
19 Iran3058
20International Judo Federation[a]3025
21 Hungary251118
22 Kazakhstan25411
23 United States23712
24 Czech Republic2125
Individual Neutral Athletes[b]2114
25 Portugal2035
26 Belgium181120
27 Ukraine13913
28 Israel1236
29  Switzerland1225
30 Serbia1214
31 Austria1146
32Russia Russian Judo Federation[c]1113
33 Tunisia1023
Yugoslavia1023
35 Italy07916
36 West Germany051318
37 Canada04711
38 Turkey0358
39 North Korea0347
40 Estonia0314
41 Belarus0268
42 Egypt0235
43 Czechoslovakia0224
44 Moldova0145
Romania0145
Tajikistan0145
47 Bulgaria0123
Sweden0123
49 Chinese Taipei0112
50 Algeria0101
Montenegro0101
Slovenia0101
53 China0033
United Arab Emirates0033
55 Finland0022
56 Armenia0011
Kyrgyzstan0011
Latvia0011
Lithuania0011
Total2602585181036

Women's medal count – individual events (1980–2025)

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Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Japan605256168
2 France352157113
3 China20131447
4 Cuba16162961
5 Great Britain13152048
6 Netherlands8113756
7 Belgium89926
8 Italy851225
9 South Korea712028
10Brazil Brazil561829
11 North Korea52411
12 Germany481830
13 Canada33410
14 Mongolia311115
15 Austria31711
16 Colombia3036
17 Spain281020
18 West Germany251219
19 United States251017
20 Poland221115
21 Israel2248
22 Argentina2215
Croatia2215
24 Ukraine2125
25 Slovenia15814
26 Kosovo1179
27 Georgia1001
International Judo Federation[a]1001
Venezuela1001
30 Portugal05510
31 Russia031013
32 Romania0358
33 Australia0336
34 Hungary0279
35 Uzbekistan0202
36 Kazakhstan0145
Turkey0145
38 Bosnia and Herzegovina0112
Norway0112
Puerto Rico0112
Sweden0112
42 Soviet Union0101
43 Azerbaijan0033
44  Switzerland0022
Tunisia0022
46 Algeria0011
Belarus0011
Bulgaria0011
Chinese Taipei0011
Czech Republic0011
Greece0011
New Zealand0011
Serbia0011
Serbia and Montenegro0011
Individual Neutral Athletes[b]0011
Total222222444888

Total medal count – individual events (1956–2025)

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Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Japan168112123403
2 France603985184
3 South Korea32967108
4 China20131750
5 Cuba19223879
6 Netherlands16225694
7 Great Britain16193368
8 Georgia11152551
9 Soviet Union11133357
10 Belgium9172046
11Brazil Brazil9143457
12 Germany9143053
13 Italy8122141
14 Russia7173761
15 Poland642535
16 Mongolia642333
17 Spain5101530
18 Uzbekistan561021
19 North Korea55818
20 United States481729
21 Austria421117
22International Judo Federation[a]4026
23 Canada371121
24 Azerbaijan362029
25 Ukraine341118
26 Israel34714
27 East Germany331420
28 Greece3227
29 Iran3058
30 Colombia3036
31 West Germany2102537
32 Hungary271827
33 Kazakhstan26816
34 Portugal25815
35 Argentina2215
Croatia2215
37 Czech Republic2136
Individual Neutral Athletes[b]2125
38 Slovenia16815
39  Switzerland1247
40 Serbia1225
41 Kosovo1179
42Russia Russian Judo Federation[c]1113
43 Tunisia1045
44 Yugoslavia1023
45 Venezuela1001
46 Romania04913
Turkey04913
48 Australia0336
49 Estonia0314
50 Belarus0279
51 Egypt0235
Sweden0235
53 Czechoslovakia0224
54 Moldova0145
Tajikistan0145
56 Bulgaria0134
57 Chinese Taipei0123
58 Algeria0112
Bosnia and Herzegovina0112
Norway0112
Puerto Rico0112
62 Montenegro0101
63 United Arab Emirates0033
64 Finland0022
65 Armenia0011
Kyrgyzstan0011
Latvia0011
Lithuania0011
New Zealand0011
Serbia and Montenegro0011
Total4824809621924

World Team Judo Championships

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The first World Team Judo Championships was held in 1994 as separate event and only for men's national teams. The first World Team Judo Championships for women's national team was held as separate event in 1997.[96] Since 1998, World Team Judo Championships for men's and women's national teams have been held at the same time and venue. It were held every four years until 2006 (although promotional team events were held during 2003 and 2005 World Judo Championships) and every year from 2007 to 2015 (except 2009). Since 2011 men's and women's team competitions became the part of World Judo Championships. Starting from 2017, it were merged into mixed team competition. Judokas who participates in the individual events at the World Championships often do not participate in the team competition.

Year Competitions Location Men Women
Gold Silver Bronze Gold Silver Bronze
1994 M Paris, France France Germany Japan
Russia
no women's competition
1997 W Osaka, Japan no men's competition Cuba South Korea France
Japan
1998 M W Minsk, Belarus Japan Brazil France
Russia
Cuba France Belgium
China
2002 M W Basel, Switzerland Japan Georgia France
Italy
Japan Cuba China
Italy
2003 M W Osaka, Japan France Japan Iran
Russia
Japan China Cuba
France
2005 M W Cairo, Egypt South Korea Japan Brazil
Georgia
France South Korea Algeria
Japan
2006 M W Paris, France Georgia Russia France
South Korea
France Cuba China
Japan
2007 M W Beijing, China Japan Brazil China
South Korea
China Cuba Japan
Mongolia
2008 M W Tokyo, Japan Georgia Uzbekistan Brazil
Russia
Japan France China
Germany
2010 M W Antalya, Turkey Japan Brazil Russia
South Korea
Netherlands Germany Japan
Turkey
2011 M W Paris, France France Brazil Japan
South Korea
France Japan Cuba
Germany
2012 M W Salvador, Brazil Russia Japan Brazil
Georgia
Japan China Brazil
Cuba
2013 M W Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Georgia Russia Germany
Japan
Japan Brazil Cuba
France
2014 M W Chelyabinsk, Russia Japan Russia Georgia
Germany
France Mongolia Germany
Japan
2015 M W Astana, Kazakhstan Japan South Korea Georgia
Mongolia
Japan Poland Germany
Russia

World Team Judo Championships — Mixed team

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Medal tables

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The results of promotional team events which were held during 2003 and 2005 World Judo Championships are not included into overall statistics.

All-time medal count

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List of World Judo Championships medalists

Updated after the 2025 World Judo Championships.

This table include all medals in the individual and team competitions won at the World Judo Championships as well as at the separate World Team Judo Championships and separate World Judo Open Championships.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan186114132432
2 France654791203
3 South Korea321272116
4 Cuba21254187
5 China21142257
6 Netherlands17225796
7 Great Britain16193368
8 Georgia15163061
9 Soviet Union11133357
10Brazil Brazil9203968
11 Belgium9172147
12 Germany9163863
13 Russia8204472
14 Italy8122444
15 Mongolia652536
 Poland652536
17 Spain5101530
18 Uzbekistan571123
19 North Korea55818
20 United States481729
21 Austria421117
22International Judo Federation[a]4026
23 Canada371121
24 Azerbaijan362029
25 Ukraine341118
26 Israel34815
27 East Germany331420
28 Greece3227
29 Iran3058
30 Colombia3036
31 West Germany2102537
32 Hungary271827
33 Kazakhstan26816
34 Portugal25815
35 Argentina2215
 Croatia2215
37 Czech Republic2136
Individual Neutral Athletes[b]2125
38 Slovenia16815
39 Switzerland1247
40 Serbia1225
41 Kosovo1179
42Russia Russian Judo Federation[c]1113
43 Tunisia1045
44 Yugoslavia1023
45 Venezuela1001
46 Turkey041014
47 Romania04913
48 Australia0336
49 Estonia0314
50 Belarus0279
51 Egypt0235
 Sweden0235
53 Czechoslovakia0224
54 Moldova0145
 Tajikistan0145
56 Bulgaria0134
57 Chinese Taipei0123
58 Algeria0112
 Bosnia and Herzegovina0112
 Norway0112
 Puerto Rico0112
62 Montenegro0101
63 United Arab Emirates0033
64 Finland0022
65 Armenia0011
 Korea[d]0011
 Kyrgyzstan0011
 Latvia0011
 Lithuania0011
 New Zealand0011
 Serbia and Montenegro0011
Totals (71 entries)5145121,0262,052

Multiple gold medalists

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Boldface denotes active judokas and highest medal count among all judokas (including these who not included in these tables) per type.

Individual events

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Rank Judoka Country Weights From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Teddy Riner France+100 kg / Open2007202311112
2Naoya Ogawa Japan+95 kg / Open19871995437
3Hifumi Abe Japan−66 kg20172025426
4Naohisa Takatō Japan−60 kg20132022415
5David Douillet France+95 kg / Open1993199744
Shōzō Fujii Japan−80 kg / −78 kg1971197944
Yasuhiro Yamashita Japan+95 kg / Open1979198344
8Ilias Iliadis Greece−90 kg200520143216
9Tato Grigalashvili Georgia−81 kg20212025325
10Alexander Mikhaylin Russia−100 kg / +100 kg / Open199920113137

All events

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Rank Judoka Country Events From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Teddy Riner France+100 kg / Open / Team20072023121 1 # 14 #
2Soichi Hashimoto Japan−73 kg / Team20172023 7 *##22 11 *##
3Shōhei Ōno Japan−73 kg / Team20132019 6 *1 7 *
4Masashi Ebinuma Japan−66 kg / Team201120155117
Riki Nakaya Japan−73 kg / Team20112017 5 **1 1 * 7 ***
6David Douillet France+95 kg / Open / Team19931997 5 * 5 *
7Alexander Mikhaylin Russia−100 kg / +100 kg / Open / Team199820134 3 *5 12 *
8Goki Tajima Japan−90 kg / Team20222025 4 #1 1 * 6 *#
9Naoya Ogawa Japan+95 kg / Open19871995437
10Hifumi Abe Japan−66 kg20172025426
Takanori Nagase Japan−81 kg / Team20142023 4 #2 6 #

# including one medal of the World Team Championships won as reserve
* including one medal of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only
*# including one medal of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only and one won as reserve
** including two medals of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only
*## including one medal of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only and two won as reserve
*** including three medals of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only

Women

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Individual events

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Rank Judoka Country Weights From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Ryōko Tani (Tamura) Japan−48 kg19912007718
Tong Wen China+78 kg / Open20012011718
3Ingrid Berghmans Belgium+72 kg / −72 kg / Open1980198964111
4Clarisse Agbegnenou France−63 kg201320246219
5Uta Abe Japan−52 kg2018202555
6Gao Fenglian China+72 kg / Open198419894116
Kye Sun-hui North Korea−52 kg / −57 kg199720074116
8Noriko Anno Japan+72 kg / −72 kg / −78 kg19932003415
Karen Briggs Great Britain−48 kg19821991415
10Driulis González Cuba−56 kg / −57 kg / −63 kg199320073227

All events

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Rank Judoka Country Events From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Clarisse Agbegnenou France−63 kg / Team20112024 8 # 3 * 3 * 14 **#
2Tong Wen China+78 kg / Open / Team200120118210
3Ryōko Tani (Tamura) Japan−48 kg19912007718
4Ingrid Berghmans Belgium+72 kg / −72 kg / Open1980198964111
5Momo Tamaoki Japan−57 kg / Team20182025 6 ****#22 10 ****#
6Chizuru Arai Japan−70 kg / Team20152019 6 # 6 #
Akira Sone Japan+78 kg / Team20172023 6 **## 6 **##
8Driulis González Cuba−56 kg / −57 kg / −63 kg / Team1993200754211
9Misato Nakamura Japan−52 kg / Team200620155218
10Gévrise Émane France−70 kg / −63 kg / Team20052015 5 *12 8 *

# including one medal of the World Team Championships won as reserve
* including one medal of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only
**# including two medals of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only and one won as reserve
**## including two medals of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only and two won as reserve
****# including four medals of the World Team Championships won for participation in the qualifying only and one won as reserve

Records

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Category Men Women
Youngest world champion
Oldest world champion

Video footage

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Notes

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  1. 1 2 3 4 Unlike in 2013, Majlinda Kelmendi did not compete at the 2014 World Championships under the Kosovo flag but under the International Judo Federation flag, as Russia does not recognise Kosovo's independence. Also, at the 2025 World Judo Championships, in accordance with sanctions imposed following by the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, judokas from Russia were not permitted to use the name, flag, or anthem of Russia and instead participated under name and flag of the International Judo Federation (IJF).
  2. 1 2 3 4 At the 2023 and 2024 World Championships, in accordance with sanctions imposed following by the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, judokas from Russia were not permitted to use the name, flag, or anthem of Russia. They instead participated as "Individual Neutral Athletes (AIN)", their medals were not included in the official medal table.
  3. 1 2 3 At the 2021 World Championships, in accordance with a ban by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and a decision by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), judokas from Russia were not permitted to use the Russian name, flag, or anthem. They instead participated as "the team of the Russian Judo Federation (RJF)", and used the flag of the Russian Olympic Committee.
  4. 1 2 3 At the 2018 World Championships, judokas from North Korea and South Korea completed for unified Korean team and won bronze medals in the Mixed team competition.

References

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  2. "1956 World Championships". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  3. "1958 World Championships". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
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