ABSTRACT

How do migrant youth negotiate their role in society through sport and leisure practices? How can political theory and qualitative critical research work together to make sense of these processes? These are among the questions that led to a long-term investigation of young males’ sport practices in Ireland, possibly the most fertile contemporary setting for the analysis of questions of sport and identity. 

Youth Sport, Migration and Culture emphasises the epistemological and ethical urgency of doing research with rather than on young people. Engaging with the social changes in Irish society through the eyes of children of immigrants growing up in Ireland, the book looks closely at young people’s leisure practices in multi-ethnic contexts, and at issues of inclusion in relation to public discourses around ‘national identity’ and immigration.

Offering compelling analysis of how ideas of race and racism are elaborated through sport, this book is fascinating reading for anybody with an interest in the sociology of sport, sport development or youth culture.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|23 pages

Flexible positions

Framing class, race and ethnicity on and off the pitch

chapter 4|30 pages

The death of a black teenager

chapter 5|26 pages

A team like no ‘Other’

chapter 6|28 pages

Follow up

The story that was not there

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion