ABSTRACT

Rethinking Aggression and Violence in Sport explores the psychological aspects of these two intrinsic elements of competitive sport.

This book critically examines the important issues associated with aggression and violence in sport, including:

* a review of current theory in the psychology of aggression
* exploration of how players become acclimatised to physical violence
* discussion of the psychological benefits of sanctioned and unsanctioned sport violence
* examination of the moral and ethical dimensions of the debate
* the psychological basis of spectator aggression
* case studies from a wide variety of sports.

This text is a must read for researchers and students within sport studies, psychology and sociology with an interest in human violence and aggressive behaviour.

chapter |18 pages

The State of Play

Incidents, Definitions and Explanations

chapter |8 pages

New Beginnings

A Reversal Theory View of Violence

chapter |20 pages

The Joy of Physical Contact

Sanctioned Aggression and Violence in Sport

chapter |14 pages

When Things Turn Ugly

Unsanctioned Aggression and Violence

chapter |14 pages

Taking the Hard Knocks

Children's and Youth Sport

chapter |20 pages

Beyond the Pale

Fan Violence and Sports Riots

chapter |20 pages

Blood and Guts

Observing Violence in Sport

chapter |18 pages

The Final Whistle

Rounding Off