ABSTRACT

Sport is often seen as an indicator of the civic maturity of a community, an aspect of the rights of citizens to health, education and social integration. This book examines the relationships between participation in sport and physical activity, and welfare policies across Europe.

It argues that the success of campaigns for the promotion of sport depend on the existence of dedicated welfare policies promoted by the European states and explores variations in cultural models and structures of governance across Europe. Addressing the function of supranational institutions such as the EU as well as voluntary networks, the book illuminates key issues in European societies such as migration, financial austerity and Brexit as they relate to sport policy.

This is important reading for scholars and students in the fields of European sport and physical activity, sociology, political science and organisational analysis, as well as operators and managers of the sport systems involved in advanced training programmes.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

Sport and the citizens of a disenchanted Europe

part I|60 pages

Sports policies, non-profit and social issues

chapter 4|15 pages

European sport systems and the voluntary sector

Non-profit organisations’ race for sport development

chapter 5|16 pages

Sport in jail

A sociological comparative perspective

part II|86 pages

The sport of citizenship

chapter 6|6 pages

The Europeanisation of sport

Sociology of a new European public action

chapter 9|11 pages

Sport and welfare in Britain

chapter 13|10 pages

In the homeland of sport for all

The Scandinavian countries

chapter |16 pages

Conclusion

Established models of European sport revisited from a socio-politological approach 1