Debates around the 'sport for development and peace' (SDP) movement have entered a new phase, moving on from simple questions surrounding the utility of sport as a tool of international development. This book argues that critical research and new perspectives are necessary to balance the local aspects and global influences of sport and to better understand the power relations embedded in SDP on a transnational scale. It covers a wider agenda than previous books on SDP, exploring issues such as global health beyond HIV/AIDS, the role of new media, environmental concerns, child protection, and gender-based violence.
Introduction 1. Theorizing Sport for Development: Intersections among Sport, Gender and Development Reflection 2. Cuban Sport and the Challenges of South-South Solidarity Reflection 3. Development and peace through sport in 'Confucian Asia' Reflection 4. Child protection and SDP: the post-MDG agenda for policy practice and research Reflection 5. Beyond Girl Power and the Girl Effect: The Girling of Sport for Development and Peace Reflection 6. The Benefits and Challenges of Girl-focused Indigenous SDP programs in Australia and Canada Reflection 7. Sustainable Management of Sport-for-Development through Youth Re-Engagement: The FREYCA Framework Reflection 8. Examining the educator: toward a critical pedagogy of sport for development and peace Reflection 9. Theorizing Role Models in Sport for Development and Peace Reflection 10. Researching 'Sustainable Development in African Sport': A case study of a North-South academic collaboration Reflection 11. Researching with Go Sisters, Zambia: reciprocal learning in sport for devleopment Reflection
Lyndsay M. C. Hayhurst is a Banting Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) postdoctoral fellow at the Liu Institute for Global Issues, University of British Columbia, Canada. Her research interests include sport for development and peace, cultural studies of girlhood, postcolonial feminist theory, global governance, international relations and corporate social responsibility. Her publications have appeared in Third World Quarterly, Sociology of Sport Journal, and Gender, Place and Culture. She has previously worked for the United Nations Development Programme and Right to Play
Tess Kay is Professor in Sport and Social Sciences at Brunel University, London, UK and since 2014 Leader for the Welfare, Health and Wellbeing cross-university multidisciplinary research group. She has conducted a wide range of research into sport, health and social justice. She is an author of Localizing global sport for development, a collaborative account with Iain Lindsey, Ruth Jeanes and Davies Banda, of nearly a decade of interconnected SPD research in Zambia (Bloomsbury, 2015)
Megan Chawansky is a senior lecturer in the School of Sport and Service Management at the University of Brighton, UK. Her research examines various facets of the SDP sector and seeks to offer both theoretical and applied knowledge. She began her work in the SDP realm as a programme director for PeacePlayers International Cyprus in 2008