1st Edition

Sustainability in high performance sport Current practices - Future directions

Edited By Natalie Barker-Ruchti, Dean Barker Copyright 2016
    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    Success in high performance sport is highly valued in today’s world, with lucrative contracts, sponsorship deals, and opportunities for celebrity status balanced against substantial investments of time and energy, and high chances of failure. With pressure mounting on athletes and coaches to make the most of athletic investments, the temptation to make health-related or ethical compromises is growing.

    Sustainability in High Performance Sport examines the pressures faced by coaches and athletes, and considers how sustainable science can offer alternative pathways to sporting excellence. By applying principles relating to carrying capacities, complexity and uncertainty, production and consumption, and ethics, this unique book provides new ways of thinking about both enduring and emerging challenges. With a scope that includes themes such as coaching practices, coach-athlete relationships, over-training and injuries, the development of sporting expertise, and doping, Sustainability in High Performance Sport is the most comprehensive exploration of sustainability in elite sport available. It is an invaluable resource for anybody with an interest in achieving long-term success in high performance sport. This book was originally published as a special issue of Reflective Practice.

    1. High performance sport and sustainability: a contradiction of terms? Dean Barker, Natalie Barker-Ruchti, Arjen Wals and Richard Tinning

    2. Coaches’ learning and sustainability in high performance sport Steven B. Rynne and Clifford J. Mallett

    3. Caring as an important foundation in coaching for social sustainability: a case study of a successful Swedish coach in high-performance sport Claes Annerstedt and Eva-Carin Lindgren

    4. Alternative discourses in the coaching of high performance youth sport: exploring language of sustainability Karin Grahn

    5. Techno-rational knowing and phronesis: the professional practice of one middle-distance running coach Natalie Barker-Ruchti, Dean Barker and Claes Annerstedt

    6. Reaching balance and sustainability: weight regulation in combat sports. A case study of a female boxer Stefan Pettersson and Marianne Pipping Ekström

    7. Growth problems in youth elite sports. Social conditions, athletes’ experiences and sustainability consequences Astrid Schubring and Ansgar Thiel

    8. ‘Just do a little more’: examining expertise in high performance sport from a sociocultural learning perspective Dean Barker, Natalie Barker-Ruchti, Steven Rynne and Jessica Lee

    9. Shifting the burden of proof in doping: lessons from environmental sustainability applied to high-performance sport Silvia Camporesi and James A. Knuckles

    Biography

    Natalie Barker-Ruchti is Associate Professor in Sports Coaching at the Department of Food and Nutrition, and Sport Science at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. Her research interests lie in understanding how sport coaches and coaching affect athlete learning, identity and wellbeing, in particular in high-performance settings. In these works, the development of sustainable sporting practices forms a key aim. She has published journals including Sports Coaching Review, The International Journal of the History of Sport, and Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy. She co-coordinates the Sport Coaching Education Program in her department and teaches on its sociological and pedagogical courses.

    Dean Barker is Associate Professor of Pedagogy and Physical Education in the Department of Food and Nutrition, and Sport Sciences at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. As an educator, he coordinates a physical education teacher education program, works with aspiring sports coaches, and is involved in professional development programs for practicing physical educators. His research interests are informed by constructivist and socially critical perspectives, and have focused on issues related to pedagogy, knowledge development, and social interaction.