Title: Sport in Society: Issues & Controversies
1Sport in SocietyIssues Controversies
- Sports and Children
- Are Organized Programs Worth the Effort?
2Origins of Organized Youth Sports
- Organized youth sports emerged in the 20th
Century - The first programs focused on masculinizing
boys - Organized youth sports grew rapidly in many
industrialized countries after World War II - Programs in the U.S. emphasized competition as
preparation for future occupational success - Girls interests generally were ignored
3Social Changes Related to the Growth of Organized
Youth Sports
- Increase in working families
- New definitions of good parent
- Growing belief that informal activities lead to
trouble for kids - Growing belief that the world is dangerous for
children - Increased visibility of high-performance and
professional sports in society
4(No Transcript)
5Major Trends in Youth Sports Today
- Organized programs have become increasingly
privatized - Organized programs increasingly emphasize the
performance ethic - An increase in elite training facilities
- Increased participation in alternative sports
6Youth SportsTypes of Sponsors
- Public, tax-supported community recreation
programs - Public non-profit community organizations
- Private nonprofit sport organizations
- Private commercial clubs
7Privatized Youth Sport Programs
- Growth is associated with the decline in publicly
funded programs - Most common in middle- and upper-middle income
areas - May reproduce economic and ethnic inequalities in
society - May not be committed to gender equity
- Private programs are not accountable in the same
way as public programs
8The Performance Ethic
- Refers to emphasizing measured outcomes as
indicators of the quality of sport experiences - Fun becoming better
- Emphasized in private programs
- Related to parental notions of investing in their
childrens future
9Elite Sport Training Programs
- Most common in private, commercial programs
- Emphasize the potential for children to gain
material rewards through sports - Children often work long hours and become like
laborers, but programs are not governed by
child labor laws - Raise ethical issues about adult-child
relationships
10(No Transcript)
11New Interests in Alternative Sports
- A response to highly structured, adult-controlled
organized programs - Revolve around desires to be expressive and
spontaneous - May have high injury rates and patterns of
exclusion related to gender and social class - Are being appropriated by large corporations for
advertising purposes
12Different Experiences
- Formal Sports Emphasize
- Formal rules
- Set positions
- Systematic guidance by adults
- Status and outcomes
- Informal Sports Emphasize
- Action
- Personal involvement
- Challenging experiences
- Reaffirming friendships
13Different Outcomes
- Formal Sports Emphasize
- Relationships with authority figures
- Learning rules and strategies
- Rule-governed teamwork achievement
- Informal Sports Emphasize
- Interpersonal decision-making skills
- Cooperation
- Improvisation
- Problem solving
14(No Transcript)
15When Are Children Ready to Play Organized,
Competitive Sports?
- Prior to age 12, children dont have the ability
to fully understand competitive team sports - They play beehive soccer
- Children must lean how to cooperate before they
can learn how to compete - Team sports require the use of a third party
perspective - Role Taking Ability
- Game Stage Developmental level
16What Are the Dynamics of Family Relationships in
Youth Sports?
- Sports have the potential to bring families
together - Being together does not always mean that close
communication occurs - Children may feel pressure from parents
- Parent labor in youth sports often reproduces
gendered logic ideas - work
- family
17How Do Social Factors Influence Youth Sport
Experiences?
- Participation opportunities vary by social class
- Encouragement often varies by gender and
ability/disability - Self perceptions and the social consequences of
participation vary by - social class
- sex
- race/ethnicity
- ability/disability
- sexuality
18Recommendations for Changing Informal
Alternative Sports
- Make play spaces more safe and accessible to as
many children as possible - Be sensitive to class and sex
- Provide indirect guidance without being
controlling - Treat sport as a worthwhile site for facing
challenges - developing competence
19Recommendations for Changing Organized Sports
- Increase action
- Increase personal involvement
- Facilitate close scores and realistic challenges
- Facilitate friendship formation and maintenance
20Recommendations for Changing High-performance
Programs
- Establish policies, procedures, and rules to
account for - the rights of children participants
- the interests of children participants
- Create less controlling environments
- to promote growth
- to promote development
- to promote empowerment
21Prospects for Change
- Often subverted when priority is given to
efficiency and organization - over age-based developmental concerns
- May be subverted by national organizations
concerned with standardizing programs - May be subverted by adult administrators with
vested interests in the status quo
22Coaching Education Programs
- Are useful when they provide coaches with
information on - Dealing with children safely and responsibly
- Organizing practices and teaching skills
- Are problematic when they foster a
techno-science approach to controlling
children - Creating sports efficiency experts should not
be the goal
23Deviance in SportsIs It Out of Control?
24Problems Faced When Studying Deviance in Sports
- Forms causes of deviance are diverse
- No single theory can explain all
- Sports behavior may be deviant in other settings
(All Star Wrestling) - Sports often involves unquestioned acceptance of
norms - rarely the rejection of norms
- Training performance have become medicalized
25(No Transcript)
26Using Functionalist Theory to Define Deviance
- Deviance involves a rejecting of accepted goals
- Or rejecting the means of achieving goals in
society - Conformity is equated with morality
- Deviance is caused by faulty socialization
- By inconsistencies in the social system
- Deviance is controlled by getting tough
- By enforcing more rules more strictly
27Using Conflict Theory to Define Deviance
- Deviance involves behavior that interferes with
the interests of those with economic power - The behavior of those who lack power is more
likely to be labeled as deviant - Those who deviate often are victims of
exploitation in a system characterized by
inequalities - The problem of deviance will be minimal when
power is equally distributed in society
28Using Interactionist Critical Theories to
Define Deviance
- Most deviance in sports is not due to the moral
bankruptcy of athletes - Much deviance in sports involves over conformity
to established norms in sports - Sport deviance must be understood in terms of the
normative context of sport cultures and the
emphasis on the sport ethic
29- Deviant Under- Conformity
- Normally Accepted Range of Behavior
- Deviance based on unquestioned acceptance of norms
- Deviance based on ignoring or rejecting norms
30The Sport Ethic
-
- A cluster of norms that represent the
accepted criteria for defining what it means to
be an athlete.
31Four Norms of the Sport Ethic
- An athlete makes sacrifices for the game
- An athlete strives for distinction
- An athlete accepts risks and plays through pain
- An athlete accepts no limits in the pursuit of
possibilities
32Why Do Athletes Engage in Deviant Over-
Conformity?
- Two reasons for over-conformity
- Sports are so exhilarating and thrilling that
athletes want to play, and they will do almost
anything to continue to do so - Being selected by coaches and managers is more
likely when athletes over conform to the sport
ethic
33Athletes Most Likely to Over- Conform to the
Sport Ethic
- Those who have low self-esteem
- Eager to be accepted by their peers
- Willing to sacrifices what they think others want
them to - Those who see achievements in sport as their only
way to get ahead - make a name
- become important in the world
34Deviant Over-Conformity and Group Dynamics
- Following the Norms of the Sport Ethic
- Special Bonds Among Athletes
- Hubris (arrogance)
35Social Processes in Elite Power Performance
Sports
- Bond athletes in ways that normalize over
conformity to the sport ethic - Separate athletes from the rest to inspire awe
and admiration among community members - Lead athletes to develop HUBRIS (a sense of
arrogance, separateness, and superiority)
36Hypotheses About Deviance Among Athletes
- Deviance becomes more likely when
- Social bonds normalize risk taking
- Athletes are separated from the rest of the
community - Athletes develop extreme degrees of hubris
- When people in the community see athletes as
being special
37Controlling Deviant Over-Conformity in Sports
- Four ways to control deviant over-conformity
- Learn to identify the forms and dynamics of
over-conformity among athletes - Raise critical questions about the meaning,
organization, and purpose of sports - Create norms in sports that discourage over-
conformity to the sport ethic - Help athletes to learn to strike a balance
between accepting and questioning rules and norms
in their sports
38Research on Deviance Among Athletes
- On the Field Deviance
- Cheating, dirty play, fighting, violence are
less common today than in the past - This historical finding contradicts popular
perceptions. - Many people think deviance is more common today
- More rules than ever before
- Expectations for conformity are greater.
39Research on Deviance Among Athletes
- Off the Field Deviance
- Athletes do not have higher delinquency rates
- Data on academic cheating is inconclusive
- Athletes have higher rates of alcohol use
- Felony rates among adult athletes do not seem to
be out of control - BUT they do constitute a problem (see Ch. 7)
40Is Sport Participation a Cure for Deviant
Behavior?
- Research suggests that organized sport might
- reduce deviance if
- A philosophy of nonviolence
- Respect for self and others
- The importance of fitness and control over self
- Confidence in physical skills
- A sense of responsibility
41DONT FORGET
- Athletes are not the only ones in sports who
engage in deviant behavior. Think of other
examples involving - Coaches
- Parents
- Spectators
- Administrators
- Team owners
- Agents
42Using Performance Enhancing Substances in Sports
- The use of performance enhancing substances
occurs regularly in high performance sports - Many cases of usage constitute a form of deviant
over conformity - Such substances will be used as long as athletes
believe they will enhance performance
43(No Transcript)
44Defining and Banning Performance Enhancing
Substances
- Defining what constitutes a performance
enhancing substance is difficult - Defining what is natural or artificial is
difficult - Defining what is fair when it comes to the use of
science, medicine, technology in sports is
difficult - Determining what is dangerous to health is
difficult - Studying and testing for substances is
constrained by ethical and legal factors
45Eight Reasons Why Substance Use So Prevalent
Today?
- The high stakes in sports have fueled research
and development of substances - Fascination with the use of technology to push
human limits - The rationalization of the body
- Heavy emphasis on self-medication
- Changing sexual relations
46Why Is Substance Use So Prevalent Today?
- The organization of power and performance sports
(must win to continue to play) - Coaches, sponsors, administrators, and fans
clearly encourage most forms of deviant
over-conformity - The social structure of elite sports (control
over body and conformity to demands of coaches)
47Arguments Against Testing
- Testing will never be able to identify all
substances athletes use to enhance performance - Athletes and substance manufacturers can stay one
step ahead of the testers - Mandatory testing, testing without cause, and
using blood and tissue violates ideas about
rights to privacy in many cultures
48Arguments for Testing
- To be meaningful, sport performances must involve
natural abilities - Drug use destroys the basis for competition by
subverting fairness - Drug use threatens the health and well-being of
athletes - Drug use is immoral and must be stopped
49Controlling Substance Use Where to Start (I)
- Critically examine the hypocrisy in elite sports
- Establish rules indicating that risks to health
are undesirable and unnecessary in sports - Establish rules stating that injured athletes
must be independently certified as well before
they may play - Educate young athletes to define courage and
discipline in ways that promote health
50Controlling Substance Use Where to Start (II)
- Establish a code of ethics for sport scientists
- Make drug education part of deviance and health
education - Create norms regulating use of technology
- Critically examine values and norms in sports
- Redefine meaning of achievement
- Teach athletes to think critically
- Provide accurate and current information to
parents, coaches, and athletes
51- Violence in Sports
- How Does It Affect Our Lives?
52Definition of Violence
- The use of excessive force that causes or has
the potential to cause harm or destruction - Violence is not always illegal or disapproved
- It may be praised and lauded as necessary
- When violence involves widespread rejection of
norms, it may signal anarchy - When violence involves extreme over-conformity to
norms, it may signal fascism
53Definition of Aggression
- Verbal or physical behavior grounded in an
intent to dominate, control, or do harm to
another person - Aggression is not the same as assertiveness,
competitiveness, or trying hard - Intimidation refers to words, gestures, and
actions that threaten violence or aggression
54Violence in Sports History
- Figurational research shows that violence was
more severe in the past - On the field off the field
- Rates of sports violence have not automatically
increased over time - Violence in sports remains a crucial social issue
today - Sports violence can serve to reproduce an
ideology of male privilege
55Types of On-the-field Violence
- Brutal body contact
- Hits, Tackles, Blocks, or any forceful body
contact - Borderline violence
- Brush Back Pitch, Elbow, the Bump in running,
Fight in hockey, or any force with the intent to
cause bodily harm - Quasi-criminal violence
- Cheap Shot, Late Hits, or any use of force that
violates the rules - Criminal violence
- Physical Assault that usually brings criminal
charges
56Violence As Deviant Over Conformity to the Sport
Ethic (I)
- Coaches may expect players to use violence
- Violence often attracts media attention
- Players may not like violence, even though most
accept it as part of the game - Quasi and criminal violence are routinely
rejected by athletes and spectators
57Violence As Deviant Over- Conformity to the Sport
Ethic (II)
- Violence may be related to insecurities in high
performance sports - Expressions of violence are related to gender,
but not limited to men - Physicality creates drama and excitement, strong
emotions, and special bonds among all athletes,
male and female
58Commercialization and Violence
- Some athletes are paid to do violence
- Commercialization and money expand the visibility
of violence in sports, and violent discourse in
and about sports - Violence is not caused by TV and money it
existed long before TV coverage and big salaries
59Violence and Masculinity
- Violence is grounded in general cultural norms
- Violence in sports is not limited to men
- Playing power and performance sports often are
ways to prove masculinity
60Violence, Masculinity, Social Class, Race
- Among men from low-income backgrounds, violence
may be a tool to bring respect - Black men may use violence to exploit white
stereotypes
61Violence Is Institutionalized in Some Sports
- In non-contact sports, violence is usually
limited to using violent images in talk - In contact mens sports, players learn to use
violence as a strategy - Enforcers goons are paid to do violence
- In womens contact sports, violence may be used
as a strategy, but not to prove femininity
62Pain and Injury As the Price of Violence
- A popular paradox in todays sports People
accept violence while being concerned about
injuries caused by violence - Disabling injuries caused by violence in some
sports are serious problems - Dominant ideas about masculinity are related to
high injury rates in mens sports
63Controlling On-the-field Violence
- Brutal body contact is the most difficult form of
violence to control - Most injuries occur on legal hits
- The most effective strategies might involve
- Suspensions for players
- Fines for team owners
64Off-the-field Violence
- Carryover data are inconclusive
- Assault and sexual assault rates among male,
heterosexual athletes are a serious problem - These behaviors are a serious problem in society
as a whole - Debates about whether rates are higher among
athletes distract attention from the problem of
violence in culture
65Hypotheses About Male Athletes Violence Against
Women
- Violence is related to
- Support from fellow athletes for using physical
force as a strategy - Perceived cultural support for domination as a
basis for status identity among men - Deviant over-conformity to the norms of the sport
ethic
66Hypotheses About Male Athletes Violence Against
Women
- Violence is related to
- Support for the belief that women constitute
groupies in sport worlds - Collective HUBRIS and the notion that outsiders
do not deserve respect - Institutional support for elite athletes
regardless of behavior - Institutional failures to hold athletes
accountable for deviance
67Learning to Control Violence in Sports
- Control may be learned if
- The social world formed around a sport promotes a
mindset norms emphasizing - Non-violence
- Self-control
- Respect for self and others
- Physical fitness
- Patience
68Violence Is Most Likely When
- Sports are organized in ways that
- Produce HUBRIS
- Separate athletes from the community
- Encourage athletes to think that others do not
deserve their respect
69Violence in Sports Gender Ideology
- Doing violence in sports reproduces the belief
that men are superior to women - Power performance sports, when they encourage
violence, emphasize difference between men and
women - Sports violence reproduces an ideology of male
entitlement
70Violence Among Spectators
- No data on how watching sports may influence
violence in everyday relationships - Spectators at non-contact sports have low rates
of violence - Spectators at contact sports have rates of
violence that constitute a problem in need of
analysis and control - Rates today are lower than rates in the past
71Celebratory Violence
-
- This form of violence has not been studied
systematically by scholars in the sociology of
sport
72(No Transcript)
73General Factors Related to Violence at Sport
Events
- Action in the sport event itself
- Crowd dynamics the situation in which
spectators watch the event - Historical, social economic, political context
in which the event is planned and played
74Crowd Dynamics Situational Factors
- Crowd size
- Composition of crowd
- Meaning and importance of event
- History of relationship between teams
- Crowd control strategies at event
- Alcohol consumption by spectators
- Location of event
- Motivations for attending the event
- Importance of teams as sources of identity for
spectators
75Controlling Crowd Violence
- Be aware of the following factors
- Perceived violence on the field is positively
related to crowd violence - Crowd dynamics and conditions
- Historical, social, political issues underlying
spectator orientations