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Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society?
Sport in Society, Volume: 16, Issue: 10, Pages: 1279 - 1292
Swansea University Author: Marty Chamberlain
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DOI (Published version): 10.1080/17430437.2013.821251
Abstract
This paper discusses sports-based interventions (SBIs) and the problem of youth crime. It notes the positive role sport can play in changing to better the lives of young people. However, there is a lack of robust evidence to support the argument that participation in sporting activity can lead to a...
Published in: | Sport in Society |
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2013
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http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fcss20/current |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa29709 |
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2018-04-11T15:53:55.8365326 v2 29709 2016-09-02 Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? 98bbc13e72a7ce4126a562a668e50144 0000-0001-6067-6561 Marty Chamberlain Marty Chamberlain true false 2016-09-02 CRIM This paper discusses sports-based interventions (SBIs) and the problem of youth crime. It notes the positive role sport can play in changing to better the lives of young people. However, there is a lack of robust evidence to support the argument that participation in sporting activity can lead to a reduction in anti-social and offending behaviour. The paper discusses how through focusing on ‘individual needs’ and ‘pathways to work’, SBIs can become overly reductionist and mask broader structural class-, gender- and race-based inequalities that permeate through neoliberal nation-states and western criminal justice systems. It concludes that SBI advocates must seek to promote a less homogeneous idea of what an SBI is, as well as be more sensitive to the diverse needs of young people, particularly if they are to tackle the underlying structural inequalities that arguably create the social problem, that is youth crime in the first place. Journal Article Sport in Society 16 10 1279 1292 Anti-social behaviour, crime prevention, diversity, sports-based intervention, youth crime 1 8 2013 2013-08-01 10.1080/17430437.2013.821251 http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fcss20/current COLLEGE NANME Criminology COLLEGE CODE CRIM Swansea University 2018-04-11T15:53:55.8365326 2016-09-02T17:30:16.6892389 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law John Martyn Chamberlain 1 Marty Chamberlain 0000-0001-6067-6561 2 0029709-11042018155304.pdf 29709.pdf 2018-04-11T15:53:04.0270000 Output 513185 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2016-09-02T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
spellingShingle |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? Marty Chamberlain |
title_short |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
title_full |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
title_fullStr |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
title_sort |
Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society? |
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98bbc13e72a7ce4126a562a668e50144 |
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98bbc13e72a7ce4126a562a668e50144_***_Marty Chamberlain |
author |
Marty Chamberlain |
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John Martyn Chamberlain Marty Chamberlain |
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Sport in Society |
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2013 |
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Swansea University |
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description |
This paper discusses sports-based interventions (SBIs) and the problem of youth crime. It notes the positive role sport can play in changing to better the lives of young people. However, there is a lack of robust evidence to support the argument that participation in sporting activity can lead to a reduction in anti-social and offending behaviour. The paper discusses how through focusing on ‘individual needs’ and ‘pathways to work’, SBIs can become overly reductionist and mask broader structural class-, gender- and race-based inequalities that permeate through neoliberal nation-states and western criminal justice systems. It concludes that SBI advocates must seek to promote a less homogeneous idea of what an SBI is, as well as be more sensitive to the diverse needs of young people, particularly if they are to tackle the underlying structural inequalities that arguably create the social problem, that is youth crime in the first place. |
published_date |
2013-08-01T03:36:09Z |
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1763751566888665088 |
score |
11.037603 |