Expanding Social Inclusion in Community Sports Organizations: Evidence from Rural Australian Football Clubs

Australian Football clubs have traditionally been seen as contributing social benefits to the rural communities in which they are embedded. Declining numbers of participants, both players and volunteers, suggest that this role may not be as strong today. Critical explorations of the extent to which...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of sport management 2013-11, Vol.27 (6), p.453-466
Hauptverfasser: Frost, Lionel, Lightbody, Margaret, Halabi, Abdel K
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container_title Journal of sport management
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creator Frost, Lionel
Lightbody, Margaret
Halabi, Abdel K
description Australian Football clubs have traditionally been seen as contributing social benefits to the rural communities in which they are embedded. Declining numbers of participants, both players and volunteers, suggest that this role may not be as strong today. Critical explorations of the extent to which football has driven social inclusion and exclusion in such environments emphasizes a historic masculine culture of drinking and violence that segregates and marginalizes women and children. Less is known about the contemporary strategic efforts of clubs to use social capital to support their activities, and whether the resources they generate have positive impacts on social inclusion in the wider community. We use evidence from the Parliament of Victoria’s Inquiry into Country Football (2004) to explore the current focus of rural Australian Football clubs regarding social inclusion, in light of changes occurring in society and rural towns in the 21st century.
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subjects Australian football
Culture
Masculinity
Professional football
Rural areas
Social capital
Sociology
Sports & recreation clubs
Studies
title Expanding Social Inclusion in Community Sports Organizations: Evidence from Rural Australian Football Clubs
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