ABSTRACT

In recent years there has been a steady increase in the racial and ethnic diversity of the playing workforce in many sports around the world. However, there has been a minimal throughput of racial and ethnic minorities into coaching and leadership positions. This book brings together leading researchers from around the world to examine key questions around ‘race’, ethnicity and racism in sports coaching.

The book focuses specifically on the ways in which ‘race’, ethnicity and racism operate, and how they are experienced and addressed (or not) within the socio-cultural sphere of sports coaching. Theoretically informed and empirically grounded, it examines macro- (societal), meso- (organisational), and micro- (individual) level barriers to racial and ethnic diversity as well as the positive action initiatives designed to help overcome them. Featuring multi-disciplinary perspectives, the book is arranged into three thematic sections, addressing the central topics of representation and racialised barriers in sports coaching; racialised identities, diversity and intersectionality in sports coaching; and formalised racial equality interventions in sports coaching.

Including case studies from across North America, Europe and Australasia, ‘Race’, Ethnicity and Racism in Sports Coaching is essential reading for students, academics and practitioners with a critical interest in the sociology of sport, sport coaching, sport management, sport development, and ‘race’ and ethnicity studies.

Chapter 1 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. 

part I|94 pages

Representation and racialised barriers in sports coaching

chapter 2|21 pages

‘Fit for doing but not fit for organising’

Racisms, stereotypes and networks in coaching in professional football in Europe

chapter 3|16 pages

Is there a glass ceiling or can racial and ethnic barriers be overcome?

A study on leadership positions in professional Belgian football among African coaches

chapter 5|17 pages

British Asian football coaches

Exploring the barriers and advocating action in English football

part II|82 pages

Racialised identities, diversity and intersectionality in sports coaching

chapter 6|15 pages

Finding the ‘natural’

Talent identification and racialisation in sports coaching and selection practices in Australia

chapter 7|16 pages

From freedom to oppression?

A Freirean perspective on coaching and indigenous players’ journeys to the NRL and AFL

chapter 9|17 pages

Beyond the Xs and Os

The representation of black college coaches

chapter 10|17 pages

Transnational coaches

A critical exploration of intersections of race/ethnicity and gender

part III|56 pages

Formalised racial equality interventions in sports coaching

chapter 11|17 pages

When the law won’t work

The US National Football League’s extra-judicial approach to addressing employment discrimination in coaching

chapter 12|15 pages

The EFL voluntary code of recruitment

Using reflexive regulation to increase the racial diversity of professional football coaching in England

chapter 13|22 pages

Game changer or empty promise?

The EFL mandatory code of coach recruitment in men’s professional football youth academies in England