1st Edition

Sport and Communities

Edited By David Hassan, Sean Brown Copyright 2014
156 Pages
by Routledge

156 Pages
by Routledge

156 Pages
by Routledge

Over the past three decades there has been widespread commitment to an understanding that sport can play a key role in community development. The role of sport within communities has been promoted with a wide range of goals such as environmental considerations, encouragement of civic pride, enhancement of confidence and self-esteem and development of social cohesion as well as the fostering of a... Read more

1. Sport and communities: an introduction  2. Sport, community involvement and social support  3. How do youth sports facilitate the creation of parental social ties?  4. Working together through sport? Local authority provision for ethnic minorities in the UK  5. What does commitment mean to volunteers in youth sport organizations?  6. The mobilizing effects and health benefits of proximity sport facilities: urban andvenvironmental analysis of the Bleu, Blanc, Bouge project and Montreal North’s outdoor rink  7. Sport and community integration in Northern Ireland  8. Women’s toplessness on the Red Mile, Calgary, May – June 2004  9. Volunteer roles, involvement and commitment in voluntary sport organizations: evidence of core and peripheral volunteers  10. Epilogue: the not-so-hidden complexity of the sport-community connection

Biography

David Hassan is the current Deputy Executive Academic Editor of Sport in Society, an international, peer-reviewed journal published by Taylor and Francis Ltd. (an imprint of Routledge). In December 2006 he was presented with the Award of Distinguished Research Fellowship by the University of Ulster in recognition of his outstanding contribution to research during his short time at Ulster. Dr Hassan’s research expertise concerns the relationship between sport and national identity, the politics of sport and sport governance. He is also a Visiting Scholar with the International Research Institute (UCLAN).

Sean Brown received his Ph.D. in 2013 from Northeastern University. His primary research interests include sport and community, social capital, and urban sociology. Sean currently works as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Chicago, where he is exploring links between social capital and low-income families.