
About this Research Topic
The issue of welfare in sport has become paramount in recent years. This has led various individuals who operate in sport (e.g. the media, professional bodies and researchers) to consider aspects such as safeguarding, clean sport, overtraining, and the wider ethics surrounding the duty of care of those involved in sport. Focusing greater attention on understanding these aspects is critical given the potentially deleterious effects these aspects may have on the well-being and mental health of individuals who are subjected to wrongdoing in sport. Furthermore, by focusing on safeguarding, clean sport, overtraining, and the wider ethics surrounding the duty of care and addressing wrongdoing, it provides a critical opportunity to improve cultures in sport and make this a more prosocial environment for all involved.
Given the need to promote a prosocial environment in sport, as well as the need to address wrongdoing in this context, it is unsurprising that some researchers, professional bodies and sport organizations have tasked themselves with the protection of individuals in this context. To date, work has been undertaken to explore how issues concerning the welfare of individuals are understood, to consider the impact of the sporting culture on the protection or otherwise of individuals operating in sport and to develop potential interventions which may protect those involved in this context. Numerous positive advances have been made to understand and improve the welfare and well-being of those involved in sport, as well as to raise awareness and education at the micro (e.g., peer-to-peer), meso (e.g., coach-athlete, coach-parent, parent-athlete), exo- (e.g., professional leagues, national governing bodies), and macro-system (e.g., media and societal views) levels. Despite this, these advances have not necessarily been well communicated between system levels or across international perspectives. Continued efforts are therefore needed to disseminate research findings, policy and practice developments in this area. Therefore, the goal of this research topic is to bring together a collection of papers that are concerned with protecting the welfare of individuals who may operate at varying system levels within organized sport.
In this Research Topic we invite submissions which:
-
-
- present original research studies in relation to safeguarding, welfare, the duty of care and the protection of various individuals who operate in organized sport (e.g., athletes [under and over-18 years of age], coaches, parents, sport officials/referees)
- outline applied (i.e., reflective) practice (i.e., case study) articles in which the delivery of safeguarding and welfare program delivery is evaluated
- describe and evaluate research intervention programs. This could comprise pre-intervention participatory/co-design methods, and/or quantitative and/or qualitative evaluations of program effectiveness
- narrative or systematic reviews that appraise and evaluate the research evidence pertaining to the scope of this special topic issue
- national governing body/Olympic Committee position statements or short communications that provide national or international position on policy in relation to the special topic issue.
-
Keywords
safeguarding, welfare, duty of care, well-being, mental health
Topic Editors
-
-
- James L Rumbold, Academy of Sport and Physical Activity, Sheffield Hallam University
- Ashley Stirling, University of Toronto
-
Manuscripts can be submitted to this Research Topic via the following journals:
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.
About Frontiers Research Topics
Submission Deadlines
-
- November 27, 2023 | Abstract
- March 25, 2024 | Manuscript
Publication Fees
Frontiers’ Research Topics are peer-reviewed article collections around themes of cutting-edge research. Defined, managed, and led by renowned researchers, they unite the world’s leading experts around the hottest topics in research, stimulating collaboration and accelerating science.
Managed and disseminated on Frontiers’ customized Open Science platform, these collections are free to access and highly visible, increasing the discoverability, readership, and citations of your research.
Open Access provides free, unrestricted online access to scholarly literature to anyone in the world. Frontiers is a gold open-access publisher. This means that we maintain high quality services through Article Processing Charges (APCs): manuscripts that are accepted for publication by our external editors following rigorous peer-review incur a publishing fee.
Find out more about publishing fees.
Please visit the research topic homepage for further information
on submission procedures