Tag: Conferences: College sport
Call for Papers | College Sport Research Institute (CSRI) 2024 Conference on College Sport | Columbia, SC March 20–22, 2024. Call ends January 26, 2024
Related to its mission, “To provide students, scholars, and college sport practitioners a public forum to discuss relevant and timely college sport issues,” this conference will feature cutting-edge research in collegiate athletics, various panel discussions on pertinent issues affecting college athletes, and a keynote address by National Labor Relations Board General Council Jennifer Abruzzo.
Call for Papers | 13th Annual CSRI Conference on College Sport | USC Alumni Center, The University of South Carolina, April 1–3, 2020. Call ends January 24, 2020
Abstracts should reflect (but are not limited to) research addressing social-cultural, legal, financial, economic, political, administrative, or historical college-sport issues. The research should have reached a fairly complete stage of development, and the abstract should provide enough detail about the research, so reviewers have sufficient information to judge the research’s quality.
Call for Papers | 12th Annual CSRI Conference on College Sport | USC Alumni Center, April 3–5, 2019. Call ends January 18, 2019
To be considered for acceptance, abstracts should reflect college-sport research situated at the intersection of sport, politics, economics, law, sociology and society. Such research may investigate race/ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, nationalism/patriotism, or immigration issues within college sport. The research should have reached a fairly complete stage of development.
Call for Papers | 11th Annual CSRI Conference on College Sport | USC Alumni Center, April 12–14, 2018. Call ends January 19, 2018
To be considered for acceptance, abstracts must reflect research on college sport history, socio-cultural college sport issues, legal theory or the application of law to college sport issues, business-related issues in college sport, or special topics related to current college-sport issues. The research should have reached a fairly complete stage of development.