ABSTRACT

Traditional research methods textbooks tend to present an idealized and simplistic picture of the research process. This ground-breaking text however, features leading international sport researchers explaining how they actually carried out their real life research projects, highlighting the practical day-to-day problems, false starts and setbacks that are a normal part of the research process.

This book focuses on ten pieces of research that have made a distinctive and valuable contribution to the study of sport. For each one the author of that research explains how the project was conducted and the issues that they faced. In addition, each piece of research has a commentary from a leading sport scholar outlining why it is regarded as being an important contribution to the discipline of sport studies and how that research can inform studies being carried out today.

Contributors to the book describe how in their own real life research projects, they

  • initially conceptualized and defined their research projects
  • secured funding and/or sponsorship from relevant bodies
  • handled enforced changes to the research plans
  • confronted/overcame obstacles presented by outside bodies
  • managed inter-personal/emotional relationships in the research encounter
  • managed possible threats to their personal safety or physical integrity
  • managed good luck, bad luck and serendipitous findings
  • dealt with favourable and hostile media reaction to research findings.

Doing Real World Research in Sport Studies enables students and researchers to develop a more realistic understanding of what the research process actually involves. It charts the development of key research projects in sport and should be essential reading for any sport research methods course.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Real life research: The inside story

chapter |5 pages

Sports Medicine Goes Under the Knife

The Dissection of Athlete Healthcare

chapter |21 pages

Darwin's Athletes

A Retrospective After 15 Years

chapter |12 pages

Habitus as Topic and Tool

Reflections on Becoming a Prizefighter

chapter |5 pages

‘Three Funerals, two Weddings, Four Births and a Baptism'

On The Importance of Embodying Sociology

chapter |14 pages

Mischief Managed

Ticket Scalping, Research Ethics and Involved Detachment

chapter |5 pages

The Ups and Downs of Hanging Out with Ticket Scalpers

Reflections on Doing Ethnographic Research

chapter |14 pages

Bodybuilding, Drugs and Risk

Reflections on an Ethnographic Study

chapter |4 pages

Raising the Bar in Bodybuilding Research

A Commentary on Bodybuilding, Drugs and Risk by Lee F. Monaghan

chapter |5 pages

Ageing, Embodiment and Physical Activity

Some Key Methodological Issues

chapter |12 pages

Researching Inner-City Sport

Who Plays, and What are the Benefits?

chapter |5 pages

Roberts' and Brodie's Inner-City Sport

An Undiscovered Gem?

chapter |16 pages

Researching Sport-for-Development

The Need for Scepticism

chapter |4 pages

Sport-for-Development

The Work of Fred Coalter

chapter |5 pages

Yes, Minister

Insights from Research on the Politics of Policy Change in Physical Education and School Sport