Tag: Stacy-Lynn Sant
Managing Sport and Leisure, Volume 27, 2022, Issue 5
Managing Sport and Leisure is a refereed journal that publishes high quality research articles to inform and stimulate discussions relevant to sport and leisure management globally. The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: Women representation in the boardroom of Canadian sport governing bodies: structural and financial characteristics of three organizational clusters by Pamela Wicker & Shannon Kerwin.
Journal of Sport Management, Volume 35, 2021, Issue 1
The Journal of Sport Management encourages the submission of manuscripts in a number of areas as they relate to the management, governance, and consumption of sport. Studies using quantitative and/or qualitative approaches are welcomed. The The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: Solving the Athleisure Myth: A Means-End Chain Analysis of Female Activewear Consumption by Xiaochen Zhou, Daniel C. Funk, Lu Lu, and Thilo Kunkel.
Journal of Sport & Tourism, Volume 23, 2019, Issue 4 | Sport & Tourism Events
The Journal of Sport & Tourism (JS&T) aims to publish research that makes a clear contribution, substantively, theoretically or methodologically, to the body of knowledge relating to all aspects of the relationship between sport and tourism. Editor’s pick from the current issue: ONE ULTRAMARATHON, TWO CITIES: DIFFERENCES IN SOCIAL IMPACT PERCEPTIONS by Marco Scholtz.
European Sport Management Quarterly, Volume 19, 2019, Issue 2
The European Sport Management Quarterly (ESMQ) publishes articles that contribute to our understanding of how sport organizations are structured, managed and operated. The Journal sets out to enhance our understanding of the role of sport management and sport bodies in social life and the way social, political and economic forces and practices affect these organizations.
Sport, Business and Management: An International Journal, Volume 7, 2017, Issue 4
Sport, Business and Management serves to promote the development of a coherent, high-quality body of work in sport, business and management, an area that has until now been largely overlooked by academia despite being one of the few industries to warrant its own daily section in most newspapers.