Quid interpersonal violence in the sport integrity literature? A scoping review

Authors: Constandt, B., Vertommen, T., Cox, L., Kavanagh, E., Kumar, B.P., Pankowiak, A., Parent, S. and Woessner, M.

Journal: Sport in Society

Volume: 27

Issue: 1

Pages: 162-180

ISSN: 1743-0437

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2233433

Abstract:

Interpersonal violence (IV) against athletes has gained increased research, policy, and media attention. The purpose of this study is to analyze the scientific sport integrity literature (2010-2020) to better understand (a) to what extent, and (b) how IV has been discussed therein. Implementing Arksay and O’Malley’s scoping review framework, 1,342 studies were identified. Most studies focused on doping (n = 930), and to a lesser extent (illegal) gambling (n = 191), and match-fixing (n = 61). Only 36 studies broadly discussed IV as a sport integrity issue. Further thematic analysis showed that IV is sometimes recognized as a personal and organizational sport integrity threat and as an instrumental facilitator for other integrity breaches. Moreover, the normalization of aggression and violence in sport was a recurring theme, hampering safe, fair, and inclusive sport systems and organizations. To effectively address the issue of IV, this review article advocates for a broad, integral, and holistic sport integrity approach.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38793/

Source: Scopus

Quid interpersonal violence in the sport integrity literature? A scoping review

Authors: Constandt, B., Vertommen, T., Cox, L., Kavanagh, E., Kumar, B.P., Pankowiak, A., Parent, S. and Woessner, M.

Journal: SPORT IN SOCIETY

Volume: 27

Issue: 1

Pages: 162-180

eISSN: 1743-0445

ISSN: 1743-0437

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2233433

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38793/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Quid interpersonal violence in the sport integrity literature? A scoping review

Authors: Constandt, B., Vertommen, T., Cox, L., Kavanagh, E., Kumar, P., Pankowiak, A., Parent, S. and Woessner, M.

Journal: Sport in Society

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

ISSN: 1461-0981

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2233433

Abstract:

Interpersonal violence (IV) against athletes has gained increased research, policy, and media attention. The purpose of this study is to analyze the scientific sport integrity literature (2010-2020) to better understand (a) to what extent, and (b) how IV has been discussed therein. Implementing Arksay and O’Malley’s scoping review framework, 1,342 studies were identified. Most studies focused on doping (n=930), and to a lesser extent (illegal) gambling (n=191), and match-fixing (n=61). Only 36 studies broadly discussed IV as a sport integrity issue. Further thematic analysis showed that IV is sometimes recognized as a personal and organizational sport integrity threat and as an instrumental facilitator for other integrity breaches. Moreover, the normalization of aggression and violence in sport was a recurring theme, hampering safe, fair, and inclusive sport systems and organizations. To effectively address the issue of IV, this review article advocates for a broad, integral, and holistic sport integrity approach.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38793/

Source: Manual

Quid interpersonal violence in the sport integrity literature? A scoping review

Authors: Constandt, B., Vertommen, T., Cox, L., Kavanagh, E., Kumar, B.P., Pankowiak, A., Parent, S. and Woessner, M.

Journal: Sport in Society

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

ISSN: 1461-0981

Abstract:

Interpersonal violence (IV) against athletes has gained increased research, policy, and media attention. The purpose of this study is to analyze the scientific sport integrity literature (2010-2020) to better understand (a) to what extent, and (b) how IV has been discussed therein. Implementing Arksay and O’Malley’s scoping review framework, 1,342 studies were identified. Most studies focused on doping (n=930), and to a lesser extent (illegal) gambling (n=191), and match-fixing (n=61). Only 36 studies broadly discussed IV as a sport integrity issue. Further thematic analysis showed that IV is sometimes recognized as a personal and organizational sport integrity threat and as an instrumental facilitator for other integrity breaches. Moreover, the normalization of aggression and violence in sport was a recurring theme, hampering safe, fair, and inclusive sport systems and organizations. To effectively address the issue of IV, this review article advocates for a broad, integral, and holistic sport integrity approach.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38793/

Source: BURO EPrints