Tag: scholarly article summary
Social Media Influencers in Equestrian Sport | A Summary
In this feature article, Aage Radmann, Susanna Hedenborg and Lovisa Broms summarize their recent article in Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, in which they present a study of six social media influencers on stable cultures in Sweden and Norway. Goffman’s interaction ritual theory (1967) and previous research on social media form the basis for a discussion of knowledge exchange, co-creation of authenticity and intimacy, and sponsorship and advertising.
Organisert idrett og skole som komplementære og konkurrerende arenaer: ulike mønstre for minoritets- og majoritetsungdom? Et sammendrag
I den här featureartikeln sammanfattar Mads Skauge och Arvid Hjelseth sin senaste forskningsstudie publlcerad i Nordisk tidsskrift förungdomsforskning, i vilken de undersöker vad som ligger bakom att ungdomar lämnar den organiserade idrotten i de senare tonåren, med särskild uppmärksamhet på skolarbetets roll och på skillnader mellan minoritets- och majoritetsungdom.
Organized Sport and School as Complementary and Competing Venues: Different Patterns for Minority and Majority Youth? | A Summary
In this feature article, Mads Skauge and Arve Hjelseth summarize their recent article from Nordisk tidsskrift for ungdomsforskning (the Norwegian Journal of Youth Studies) in which they examine what lies behind young people leaving organized sports in their late teens, with special attention to the role of school homework and on differences between minority and majority youth.
Stable cultures in cyberspace: A study about equestrians’ use of social media as knowledge platforms | A summary
In this feature article, Lovisa Broms, Marte Bentzen, Aage Radmann & Susanna Hedenborg summarize their recent article in Scandinavian Sport Studies Forum in which they chart and analyze how equestrians use social media, how they communicate horse-related content on social media, and how social media can be seen as a source for knowledge exchange, focusing on how equestrians use social media to acquire information about horses.
Tensions and tractions of moving together and alone in physical education | A summary
In this feature article, Laura Suominen Ingulfsvann, Vegard Fusche Moe & Gunn Engelsrud summarize their recent article in Sport, Education and Society in which they study and analyze children’s movements while playng games in a school physical education context. The authors demonstrate how multiple actions and multiple dimensions of movement emerge simultaneously and how children’s own movements and the activity emerge and develop through reciprocal interactions.
What do we know about research on parasport coaches? A scoping review | A summary
In this feature article, Marte Bentzen, Danielle Alexander, Gordon A. Bloom and Göran Kenttä summarize their recent article in Adapted Physical Activity Quarterly in which they provide a broad overview of the literature pertaining to parasport coaches, including information regarding the size and scope of research, the populations and perspectives obtained, and the type of methods used to conduct the research.
The need for a violence prevention programme in ice hockey: A case study on how hegemonic masculinity supports and challenges violent behaviour in Swedish ice hockey | A summary
In this feature article, Daniel Alsarve summarizes his recent article from European Sport Management Quarterly in which he discusses the effects of hegemonic masculinity in ice hockey on and off ice, and ways and means to counter the effects of this particular ice hockey culture, which entails addiction to alcohol and violent and aggressive behaviour outside the rink. The author suggests three specific preventative action.
Kjønnet trening som uttrykk for kjønnet mening? Treningsorganisering og treningsmotiver blant ungdom i Norge 13-18 år 2010-2018 | Et sammendrag
I den här featureartikeln sammanfattar Mads Skauge och Kolbjørn Rafoss sin senaste foskningsstudie publlcerad i Tidsskrift för kjønnsforskning, där de undersöker skillnader i pojkars och flickors motiv för träning och deltagande i idrottsföreningar, gym och egenorganiserad träning. Med utgångspunkt i Giddens’ reflexivitetskoncept och Bourdieus habitusbegrepp diskuteras hur skillnader i träningsmotiv kan förklaras som uttryck för könade identitetsprojekt och könshabitus.
Gendered Exercise as an Expression of Gendered Meaning? Exercise Contexts and Motives Among Norwegian Youths 13–18 Years Old, 2010–2018 | A Summary
In this feature article, Mads Skauge and Kolbjørn Rafoss summarize their recent article from Tidsskrift for kjønnsforskning (the Norwegian Journal of Gender Studies) in which they report a major study that examines differences in boys’ and girls’ exercise motives and participation in sports clubs, fitness gyms and self-organized exercise, drawing on Giddens’ concept of reflexivity and Bourdieu’s notion of gendered habitus.
Sport is not industry: bringing sport back to sport management | A summary
In this feature article, Hallgeir Gammelsæter summarizes his recent article from European Sport Management Quarterly in which he takes on the important issue of the place of sport in sport management. Gammelsæter bemoans the fact that the sport management field of research has developed into a sort of sport business management studies, and he argues for a return to sport and a more sport-focused theory of sport management.