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    Sport, Education and Society, Volume 27, 2022, Issue 7

    Sport, Education and Society encourages contributions from social scientists and educationalists studying the relationships between pedagogy, ‘the body’ and society, The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: Fostering unorganized sport to sustain adolescent participation: empirical evidence from two European countries by Victoria Rindler, Maxime Luiggi & Jean Griffet.

    International Journal of the Sociology of Leisure Vol. 2, 2019, Issue 1–2

    IJSL publishes high-quality papers on the sociology of leisure that have a global interest, and promote the development of this mature field within international sociology, beyond traditional leisure studies. The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: FORECASTING THE SOCIAL RETURN ON INVESTMENT ASSOCIATED WITH CHILDREN’S PARTICIPATION IN CIRCUS-ARTS TRAINING ON THEIR MENTAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING by Richard McGrath, Kristen Stevens.

    Overwhelming praise for comprehensive and thought-provoking handbook

    Originally published in 2014 and edited by Jennifer Hargreaves and Eric Anderson, the Routledge Handbook of Sport, Gender and Sexuality comprises 53 chapters penned by 68 internationally renowned sport scholars. According to our reviewer Benjamin Moreland, this perennial handbook is a vital contribution to the academic conversations surrounding gender and sexuality and a foundational read for scholars and students alike.

    Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health, Volume 10, 2018, Issue 4: Exercise is Medicine: Qualitative Contributions

    Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health is a landmark publication – it is the first international journal solely dedicated to the advancement and dissemination of qualitative research in the sport, exercise, and health sciences. Open to all qualitative approaches, QRSEH aims to be eclectic in content. It will publish refereed articles covering the diverse landscape of qualitative research.

    Insightful, in-depth overview of the effects of neoliberalism on the governance and management of sports

    The edited volume Sport and Neoliberalism: Politics, Consumption, and Culture (Temple University Press), compiled by David L. Andrews and Michail L. Silk, takes a critical stance on neoliberalism as a dominant organizing mechanism, in society and in sports. Our reviewer Russell Holden has but few reservations to this vital and useful analysis of modern sports.
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