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Participation in sport, empowerment, and safety from violence : critiquing the connections through women’s experiences in Aotearoa/New Zealand Lynzi Armstong and Abby Hutchison

By: Armstrong, Lynzi.
Contributor(s): Hutchison, Abby.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Violence Against Women.Publisher: Sage, 2021Subject(s): ATTITUDES | EMPOWERMENT | GENDER EQUALITY | MISOGYNY | PROTECTIVE FACTORS | QUALITATIVE RESEARCH | SAFETY | SEXUAL HARASSMENT | SPORT | VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN | YOUNG WOMEN | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177%2F10778012211008982 In: Violence Against Women, 2021, Advance online publication, 26 May 2021Summary: Men’s violence against women is a global issue, and in recent decades its relationship with sport has been examined. Much research has focused on male athletes as perpetrators, seeking to understand how sport may foster misogynistic behavior. However, paradoxically, recent research has also examined women’s involvement in sport as a protective factor against gendered violence. This article explores this, drawing on the perspectives of 20 women. We argue that sport was experienced in contradictory ways, and thus, positioning women’s involvement in sport as a protective factor obscures complex experiences and reinforces the narrative that women are responsible for their safety. (Authors' abstract). Record #7150
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Violence Against Women, 2021, Advance online publication, 26 May 2021

Men’s violence against women is a global issue, and in recent decades its relationship with sport has been examined. Much research has focused on male athletes as perpetrators, seeking to understand how sport may foster misogynistic behavior. However, paradoxically, recent research has also examined women’s involvement in sport as a protective factor against gendered violence. This article explores this, drawing on the perspectives of 20 women. We argue that sport was experienced in contradictory ways, and thus, positioning women’s involvement in sport as a protective factor obscures complex experiences and reinforces the narrative that women are responsible for their safety. (Authors' abstract). Record #7150