Telling adults about it: children’s experience of disclosing interpersonal violence in community sport

Authors: Woessner, M.N., Pankowiak, A., Kavanagh, E., Parent, S., Vertommen, T., Eime, R., Spaaij, R., Harvey, J. and Parker, A.G.

Journal: Sport in Society

Volume: 27

Issue: 5

Pages: 661-680

ISSN: 1743-0437

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2268555

Abstract:

A challenge in safeguarding children from interpersonal violence (IV) in sport is the reliance on self-disclosures and a limited understanding of the frequency, barriers to and process of disclosures of IV. Through a mixed-methods design, combining survey and interviews, we explored the frequencies of childhood disclosures of experiences of IV in Australian community sport as well as who children disclosed to and how the interaction unfolded. Those who experienced peer violence disclosed at the highest frequency (35%), followed by coach (27%) or parent (13%) perpetrated IV. A parent/carer was most often the adult that the child disclosed to. Interviews highlighted how the normalisation of violence influenced all aspects of the disclosure and elements of stress buffering (normalising or rationalising) particularly underpinned the disclosure interaction. Policies and practices should explicitly identify all forms of IV in sport as prohibited conduct; education and intervention initiatives should target parents as first responders to disclosures.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39071/

Source: Scopus

Telling adults about it: children's experience of disclosing interpersonal violence in community sport

Authors: Woessner, M.N., Pankowiak, A., Kavanagh, E., Parent, S., Vertommen, T., Eime, R., Spaaij, R., Harvey, J. and Parker, A.G.

Journal: SPORT IN SOCIETY

Volume: 27

Issue: 5

Pages: 661-680

eISSN: 1743-0445

ISSN: 1743-0437

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2268555

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39071/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Telling adults about it: children’s experience of disclosing interpersonal violence in community sport

Authors: Woessner, M., Pankowiak, A., Kavanagh, E., Parent, S., Vertommen, T., Eime, R., Spaaij, R., Harvey, J. and Parker, A.

Journal: Sport in Society

Pages: 1-20

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

ISSN: 1461-0981

DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2023.2268555

Abstract:

A challenge in safeguarding children from interpersonal violence (IV) in sport is the reliance on self-disclosures and a limited understanding of the frequency, barriers to and process of disclosures of IV. Through a mixed-methods design, combining survey and interviews, we explored the frequencies of childhood disclosures of experiences of IV in Australian community sport as well as who children disclosed to and how the interaction unfolded. Those who experienced peer violence disclosed at the highest frequency (35%), followed by coach (27%) or parent (13%) perpetrated IV. A parent/carer was most often the adult that the child disclosed to. Interviews highlighted how the normalisation of violence influenced all aspects of the disclosure and elements of stress buffering (normalising or rationalising) particularly underpinned the disclosure interaction. Policies and practices should explicitly identify all forms of IV in sport as prohibited conduct; education and intervention initiatives should target parents as first responders to disclosures.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39071/

Source: Manual

Telling adults about it: children’s experience of disclosing interpersonal violence in community sport

Authors: Woessner, M.N., Pankowiak, A., Kavanagh, E., Parent, S., Vertommen, T., Eime, R., Spaaij, R., Harvey, J. and Parker, A.G.

Journal: Sport in Society

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

ISSN: 1461-0981

Abstract:

A challenge in safeguarding children from interpersonal violence (IV) in sport is the reliance on self-disclosures and a limited understanding of the frequency, barriers to and process of disclosures of IV. Through a mixed-methods design, combining survey and interviews, we explored the frequencies of childhood disclosures of experiences of IV in Australian community sport as well as who children disclosed to and how the interaction unfolded. Those who experienced peer violence disclosed at the highest frequency (35%), followed by coach (27%) or parent (13%) perpetrated IV. A parent/carer was most often the adult that the child disclosed to. Interviews highlighted how the normalisation of violence influenced all aspects of the disclosure and elements of stress buffering (normalising or rationalising) particularly underpinned the disclosure interaction. Policies and practices should explicitly identify all forms of IV in sport as prohibited conduct; education and intervention initiatives should target parents as first responders to disclosures.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/39071/

Source: BURO EPrints