Pub Date : 2023-09-30DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2261379
William Crossan, Jakub Riedl
ABSTRACTFootball migration, including flows and effects, is measured over the first 27 years of the independent Czech Football League. Hierarchical multi-level analysis is used to test previous sport migration effects. Particular attention is paid to the economic and sport position of both sending and receiving nations by examining results through the world-systems theory. Though the number of football migrants continues to rapidly increase, the statistical results of this study indicate that receiving football migrants into the semi-periphery nation of Czech, where football is a primary sport, may increase winning percentage in the short term, but it does not lead to increases in fan attendance or improve the nation’s FIFA rankings. Longer term deliberation needs to be taken by individual club teams, as well as national federations, in order maximize the benefits of migration flows in the future. AcknowledgmentsParts of this research were previously included in the second author’s master’s thesis written in the Czech language.Footnote59Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. ČeskéUnie Sport, Ročenka ČUS 2020.2. Bale and Maguire, The Global Sports Arena: Athletic Talent Migration in an Interdependent World.3. Nolasco, “Player Migration in Portuguese Football”; Lanfranchi and Taylor, Moving with the Ball; Darby, “Africa’s Place in FIFA’s Global Order: A Theoretical Frame”.; Darby, “Out of Africa”; Brewer, “The Commercial Transformation of World Football and the North – South Divide”.4. Crossan and Ruda, “Sport Migration Influences on Cultural Brand Image: A Quantitative World-Systems Analysis”; Andreff and Scelles, “Walter C. Neale 50 Years After”; Baur and Lehmann, “Does the Mobility of Football Players Influence the Success of the National Team?”; Berlinschi, Schokkaert, and Swinnen, “When Drains and Gains Coincide”; Glennon et al., “Does Employing Skilled Immigrants Enhance Competitive Performance?”; Lago-Peñas, Lago-Peñas, and Lago, “Player Migration and Soccer Performance”; Travlos, Dimitropoulos, and Panagiotopoulos, “Foreign Player Migration and Athletic Success in Greek Football”.5. Wallerstein, “The Modern World System”.6. Maguire and Pearton, “The Impact of Elite Labour Migration on the Identification, Selection and Development of European Soccer Players./Impact de La Migration de La Main d ” Oeuvre Qualifiee Sur l ’ Identification, La Selection et Le Developpement Des JeunesFootballeursEuropeens’.; Crossan and Ruda, “Sport Migration Influences on Cultural Brand Image: A Quantitative World-Systems Analysis”.7. Magee and Sugden, “‘The World at Their Feet’: Professional Football and International Labor Migration”.8. Darby, “Africa’s Place in FIFA’s Global Order: A Theoretical Frame”.; Darby, “Moving Players, Traversing Perspectives”; Stamm and Lamprecht, “Factors Governing Success in International Football: Tradition, Wealth and Size – or Is There More to It?”.9. Crossan, W., “Applying So
摘要本文对独立的捷克足球联赛的前27年进行了足球迁移,包括流动和影响。采用层次多层级分析对以往运动迁移效应进行检验。通过世界体系理论研究结果,特别关注输出国和接受国的经济和体育地位。尽管足球移民的数量持续快速增长,但本研究的统计结果表明,接纳足球移民进入捷克这个半外围国家,在那里足球是一项主要运动,可能会在短期内增加胜率,但它不会导致球迷上座率的增加或提高该国的国际足联排名。个别俱乐部队和国家联合会需要进行更长期的审议,以便在未来最大限度地发挥移民流动的好处。致谢本研究的部分内容先前已包含在第二作者的捷克语硕士论文中。脚注59披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。ČeskéUnie体育,罗<e:1>恩卡ČUS 2020.2。Bale and Maguire,《全球体育竞技场:相互依存世界中的体育人才迁移》。诺拉斯科:《葡萄牙足球的球员迁移》;兰弗兰奇和泰勒,随着球移动;《非洲在国际足联全球秩序中的地位:一个理论框架》;达比,《走出非洲》;布鲁尔,“世界足球的商业转型和南北鸿沟”,第4页。体育移民对文化品牌形象的影响:定量的世界系统分析;安德烈夫和塞塞尔,《沃尔特·c·尼尔50年后》;Baur和Lehmann,“足球运动员的流动性是否影响国家队的成功?”;Berlinschi, Schokkaert, and Swinnen,《当消耗与收益重合》;Glennon et al.,“雇佣技术移民会提高竞争绩效吗?”Lago-Peñas, Lago-Peñas和Lago,“球员迁移和足球表现”;Travlos, Dimitropoulos, and Panagiotopoulos, <希腊足球外籍球员移民与运动成功>,第5页。沃勒斯坦,《现代世界体系》。马奎尔和皮尔顿,“精英劳动力迁移对欧洲足球运动员识别、选择和发展的影响”。/欧洲青年足球运动的影响、欧洲青年足球运动的选拔和发展;“体育移民对文化品牌形象的影响:一个定量的世界系统分析”,第7期。Magee and Sugden, <“他们脚下的世界”:职业足球和国际劳工迁移>,第8期。《非洲在国际足联全球秩序中的地位:一个理论框架》;Darby,《移动玩家,穿越视角》;Stamm和Lamprecht,“国际足球成功的因素:传统、财富和规模——或者还有更多的因素?”《将社会理论应用于体育移民》,第10期。Crossan和Ruda,《购买力?捷克体育引进运动员的跨项目比较”。“篮球比赛出勤:基于纵向数据的多层次分析”,第12期。Crossan和Ruda,《购买力?“捷克体育引进运动员的跨项目比较”“体育移民对文化品牌形象的影响:一个定量的世界系统分析”,第13期。“他们脚下的世界”:职业足球和国际劳工迁移>,第14期。Baur和Lehmann,“足球运动员的流动性是否影响国家队的成功?”;Allan和Moffat,“协会足球中的肌肉流失与大脑增益”,第15页。Lago-Peñas, Lago-Peñas和Lago,“球员迁移和足球表现”。W. Crossan,《将社会理论应用于体育移民》;Rojo, Simiju, and Augusto, <体育移民研究>,第17期。“篮球比赛出勤:基于纵向数据的多层次分析”,第18期。“影响职业体育赛事出勤率的因素”[j]。“篮球比赛出勤:基于纵向数据的多层次分析”,第20期。“命运”增长。“命运”的口径。《足球转会、谣言、市场价值和新闻》,第23期。“篮球比赛出勤:基于纵向数据的多层次分析”,第24期。帕查和克罗斯。Pecha和crossan。《层次线性模型:应用与数据分析方法》,第27期。“博斯曼统治与足球人才单一市场的出现”,第28期。Lago-Peñas, Lago-Peñas,和Lago,“球员迁移和足球表现”。安德烈夫和塞塞尔,《沃尔特·c·尼尔50年后》;夸克和福特,付费土;Scelles等人,“我的团队在竞争?”格伦农等人,“雇佣技术移民能提高竞争力吗?”
{"title":"Football migration in the Czech Republic: A multi-level analysis of football migration in a semi-peripheral European Nation","authors":"William Crossan, Jakub Riedl","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2261379","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2261379","url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTFootball migration, including flows and effects, is measured over the first 27 years of the independent Czech Football League. Hierarchical multi-level analysis is used to test previous sport migration effects. Particular attention is paid to the economic and sport position of both sending and receiving nations by examining results through the world-systems theory. Though the number of football migrants continues to rapidly increase, the statistical results of this study indicate that receiving football migrants into the semi-periphery nation of Czech, where football is a primary sport, may increase winning percentage in the short term, but it does not lead to increases in fan attendance or improve the nation’s FIFA rankings. Longer term deliberation needs to be taken by individual club teams, as well as national federations, in order maximize the benefits of migration flows in the future. AcknowledgmentsParts of this research were previously included in the second author’s master’s thesis written in the Czech language.Footnote59Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. ČeskéUnie Sport, Ročenka ČUS 2020.2. Bale and Maguire, The Global Sports Arena: Athletic Talent Migration in an Interdependent World.3. Nolasco, “Player Migration in Portuguese Football”; Lanfranchi and Taylor, Moving with the Ball; Darby, “Africa’s Place in FIFA’s Global Order: A Theoretical Frame”.; Darby, “Out of Africa”; Brewer, “The Commercial Transformation of World Football and the North – South Divide”.4. Crossan and Ruda, “Sport Migration Influences on Cultural Brand Image: A Quantitative World-Systems Analysis”; Andreff and Scelles, “Walter C. Neale 50 Years After”; Baur and Lehmann, “Does the Mobility of Football Players Influence the Success of the National Team?”; Berlinschi, Schokkaert, and Swinnen, “When Drains and Gains Coincide”; Glennon et al., “Does Employing Skilled Immigrants Enhance Competitive Performance?”; Lago-Peñas, Lago-Peñas, and Lago, “Player Migration and Soccer Performance”; Travlos, Dimitropoulos, and Panagiotopoulos, “Foreign Player Migration and Athletic Success in Greek Football”.5. Wallerstein, “The Modern World System”.6. Maguire and Pearton, “The Impact of Elite Labour Migration on the Identification, Selection and Development of European Soccer Players./Impact de La Migration de La Main d ” Oeuvre Qualifiee Sur l ’ Identification, La Selection et Le Developpement Des JeunesFootballeursEuropeens’.; Crossan and Ruda, “Sport Migration Influences on Cultural Brand Image: A Quantitative World-Systems Analysis”.7. Magee and Sugden, “‘The World at Their Feet’: Professional Football and International Labor Migration”.8. Darby, “Africa’s Place in FIFA’s Global Order: A Theoretical Frame”.; Darby, “Moving Players, Traversing Perspectives”; Stamm and Lamprecht, “Factors Governing Success in International Football: Tradition, Wealth and Size – or Is There More to It?”.9. Crossan, W., “Applying So","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"20 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"136280449","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-30DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2250989
Amir Ben Porat
{"title":"Palimpsest: women write about football","authors":"Amir Ben Porat","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2250989","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2250989","url":null,"abstract":"","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"43 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"136280457","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-30DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2262925
Linda Wilhelmsen
Early termination of football careers is a challenge for elite women footballers. They quit their careers before experience, competence, and performance are fully developed, and women’s football is deprived of the opportunity to develop to the highest optimal quality. Women’s elite football is mostly semi-professional, with athletes juggling between football, work, and education. This qualitative study was conducted through semi-structured interviews with Norwegian elite women footballers (N = 7). Findings suggest the main reason for early termination is the heavy workload due to the combination of studies, work, and elite-level football, which led to exhaustion and burnout. It indicates that providing enough time to recover, fewer “to-dos” pushed into the day, and sufficient resources, hinder the harmful effects of a heavy total workload. The aim of the article is to highlight the reasons for the early termination of football careers for elite women footballers in Norway and the challenges of reaching international standards.
{"title":"Young and burned out – the dilemma of women’s elite football. Early termination of the football career for elite women footballers in Norway caused by a high degree of emotional and interpersonal stressors","authors":"Linda Wilhelmsen","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2262925","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2262925","url":null,"abstract":"Early termination of football careers is a challenge for elite women footballers. They quit their careers before experience, competence, and performance are fully developed, and women’s football is deprived of the opportunity to develop to the highest optimal quality. Women’s elite football is mostly semi-professional, with athletes juggling between football, work, and education. This qualitative study was conducted through semi-structured interviews with Norwegian elite women footballers (N = 7). Findings suggest the main reason for early termination is the heavy workload due to the combination of studies, work, and elite-level football, which led to exhaustion and burnout. It indicates that providing enough time to recover, fewer “to-dos” pushed into the day, and sufficient resources, hinder the harmful effects of a heavy total workload. The aim of the article is to highlight the reasons for the early termination of football careers for elite women footballers in Norway and the challenges of reaching international standards.","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"4 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"136341723","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-25DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2250660
Jan Chovanec
ABSTRACTRacism is a major social and cultural problem that has, in various forms, plagued football for a long time. Despite the attempts of official bodies to root it out, racist talk and behaviour are still rife among players as well as in fan communities. The present paper provides a case study of online users’ comments on the media coverage of a series of controversial incidents during a recent UEFA Europa League matchinvolving an alleged verbal act of racial abuse between two players. Adopting a discourse analytical perspective, the paper contrasts how the match controversies were reflected in the users’ public online discourses in two different cultural communities, namely the UK and the Czech Republic, and identifies some of the similarities and differences between the two. The analysis shows how the users reframe the underlying racist issue, trivialize it through humour and relativize its seriousness. The data indicate that such discourses surrounding football are important for understanding how fans construct various group identities and how specific socio-cultural contexts influence the perception of race-related controversies . Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. The Rangers coach Steven Gerrard used this phrase when talking about the key incident during his press conference on 18 March 2021: “You could say it’s been a test. I’ve tried to handle the situation in the best way I can but one thing that’s non-negotiable for me is the support for my players. I said last night that some things happen along your way as a player, a coach or a manager that aren’t really football related; they’re bigger than football or a different issue from football”. (Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfkc9NfIoys, time 8.22)2. Schmid, “The Definition of Racism”; Weaver, “Liquid Racism and the Ambiguity of Ali G”.3. van Dijk, “Racist Discourse”.4. Back et al., “Racism in Football”, 77.5. Gavins and Simpson, “Regina v John Terry”.6. Wolfers et al., “Just Because He’s Black”; Wolfers, “Self-directed Racialized Humor”.7. Back et al., “Racism in Football”, 77.8. Or, what Johansson (“Everyday Opinions in News Discussion Forums”) refers to as “everyday opinion” or “public vernacular discourse”.9. See Wrench and Garrett, “Constructions of ‘Whiteness’”; Kroon, “Recontextualizing Racism and Segregation”.10. See, for instance, Cleland, “Racism, Football Fans, and Online Message Boards”.11. Scholarly interest in online newspaper reader comments boards typically adopts a CDA perspective and concentrates on a single set of data (e.g. British) in order to identify racist themes and discourses (cf. Rowe and Goodman (“A Stinking Filthy Race of People”), Santana (“Virtuous or Vitriolic”), Harlow (“Story-chatterers Stirring Up Hate”), Catalano and Fielder (“European Spaces and the Roma”), Chovanec (“Irony as Counter Positioning”); and similar studies on social media data, e.g. Breazu and Machin (“Racism Toward the Rom
抽象主义是一个主要的社会和文化问题,以各种形式长期困扰着足球。尽管官方机构试图根除这一现象,但在球员和粉丝社区中,种族主义言论和行为仍然很普遍。本文提供了一个案例研究,在线用户对媒体报道的一系列有争议的事件进行了评论,这些事件发生在最近的欧联杯比赛中,涉及两名球员之间据称的口头种族歧视行为。本文采用话语分析的视角,对比了在英国和捷克这两个不同的文化共同体中,比赛争议是如何在用户的网络公共话语中反映出来的,并找出了两者之间的一些异同。分析显示,用户如何重新构建潜在的种族主义问题,通过幽默将其琐细化,并将其严重性相对化。数据表明,围绕足球的这种话语对于理解球迷如何构建各种群体身份以及特定的社会文化背景如何影响对种族相关争议的看法非常重要。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。在2021年3月18日的新闻发布会上,流浪者队主教练杰拉德在谈到这一关键事件时使用了这句话:“你可以说这是一场考验。我已经尽力以我所能做到的最好的方式来处理这个问题,但有一件事对我来说是不可协商的,那就是支持我的球员。我昨晚说过,作为一名球员、教练或经理,你会遇到一些与足球无关的事情;它们比足球更重要,或者是与足球不同的问题。”(来源:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfkc9NfIoys,时间8.22)施密德,《种族主义的定义》;韦弗,《流动的种族主义和阿里·G的模糊性》,第3页。范戴克,《种族主义话语》,第4页。Back等人,“足球中的种族主义”,77.5。加文斯和辛普森,“雷吉娜诉约翰·特里”。Wolfers等人,《仅仅因为他是黑人》;Wolfers,“自我导向的种族化幽默”。Back等人,“足球中的种族主义”,77.8。或者,约翰逊(《新闻讨论论坛中的日常观点》)所说的“日常观点”或“公共白话话语”。参见扳手和加勒特,““白”的结构”;《种族主义和种族隔离的重新语境化》,第10期。例如,请看克利兰的《种族主义、足球迷和在线留言板》。对在线报纸读者评论板的学术兴趣通常采用CDA视角,并专注于单一数据集(例如英国人),以识别种族主义主题和话语(参见罗和古德曼(“一个恶臭肮脏的种族”),桑塔纳(“善良或刻薄”),哈洛(“故事喋喋不休的人煽动仇恨”),卡塔兰诺和菲尔德(“欧洲空间和罗马人”),霍瓦内克(“反讽作为反定位”);以及对社交媒体数据的类似研究,例如Breazu和Machin(“对罗姆人的种族主义”)在罗马尼亚Facebook上的评论)。使用来自两种不同语言/文化的可比数据集的对比方法的例子包括Chovanec(“对罗姆人的再教育?”)关于英国和捷克讨论论坛中的反罗姆种族主义,以及Weizman和Fetzer(“问责制的话语构建”)关于以色列和英国话语。加文斯和辛普森(“里贾纳诉约翰·特里”)描述了英格兰联赛的几个这样的案例,以及随后关于2011年约翰·特里和安东·费迪南之间事件的法律诉讼。例如:https://www.sportbible.com/football/football-news-horrific-photo-of-keepers-injuries-emerge-after-kemar-roofe-head-kick-20210318。2014年1月14日访问。流浪者队对欧足联的决定提出上诉,但上诉被欧足联于2021年5月10日的决定驳回,该决定以“危险地袭击另一名球员”作为禁赛四场的原因(来源:“AB:流浪者FC vs斯拉维亚普拉哈”,最后更新于2021年5月10日,18:30,https://www.uefa.com/updates/)15)。当后来描述这一事件时,Kolář说:“如果你踢过球,你就会知道一只脚总是可以向后拉的。他说他是第一个到舞会的。但他没有补充说,他把它从我手中踢了出去,伸直了腿,打了我的头。他一直都能看到我。我等着Roofe在Instagram上给我发消息,但我却看到了来自流浪者队球迷的仇恨信息(“Kdo n<e:1> kdy kopal do míče, ví, že noha se vždycky d<e:1> stáhnout”)。Řekl, že byl u balonu první。Ale uv nedodal, že mi ho vykopl z ruky, proprol nohu和trefil mi hlavu。Celou dobu mv vidk。Čekal jsem, jestli mi třeba Roofe nenapíše na instagram, místo toho jsem si <e:1> etl nenávistné vzkazy od fanoušků Rangers”)。(来源:https://www.ruik.cz/kolar-poprve-o-zraneni-nechteli-me-pustit-z-kabiny-roofe-se-neomluvil-proti-sparte-mi-bylo-zle/,发布于2021年4月14日。) 英国的B组和捷克的A组重新计算,每组使用一个相关的商数。这篇文章的所有英文翻译都是由作者完成的。在英国数据中没有拼写错误和打字错误被纠正。参见Chovanec,“罗姆移民的其他部分”。例如:《利物浦球员在英足总比赛裁决后支持苏亚雷斯》,BBC体育,2011年12月21日。(来源:https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/16291583)点。关于幽默小说化的概念,见Kotthoff,“对话式幽默的连贯键控”;《网络联合小说化》第35页。Vásquez,语言,创造力和幽默。《网络体育转播的话语》[j]。参见Gavins和Simpson,“Regina v John Terry”。38。参见Back et al.,足球的变化。在描述关键事件时,我更倾向于使用“据称”一词,以避免任何推卸责任或有罪的暗示,或以任何方式减轻罪行的严重性。由于意识到所讨论的言语行为的高度争议性,其法律后果尚未得出结论,我希望在学术上保持客观和不感兴趣,简单地借鉴,讨论和解释主流媒体和用户在线上对该主题的贡献数据。我无意作出任何判断,本案文中的任何内容都不应被解释为偏袒冲突的一方或另一方。种族主义、足球迷和在线留言板>,第41页。韦弗,《流动的种族主义与阿里·G的模糊性》;克莱兰,《种族主义、足球迷和在线留言板》。
{"title":"‘Bigger than football’: racist talk on and off the soccer pitch","authors":"Jan Chovanec","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2250660","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2250660","url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTRacism is a major social and cultural problem that has, in various forms, plagued football for a long time. Despite the attempts of official bodies to root it out, racist talk and behaviour are still rife among players as well as in fan communities. The present paper provides a case study of online users’ comments on the media coverage of a series of controversial incidents during a recent UEFA Europa League matchinvolving an alleged verbal act of racial abuse between two players. Adopting a discourse analytical perspective, the paper contrasts how the match controversies were reflected in the users’ public online discourses in two different cultural communities, namely the UK and the Czech Republic, and identifies some of the similarities and differences between the two. The analysis shows how the users reframe the underlying racist issue, trivialize it through humour and relativize its seriousness. The data indicate that such discourses surrounding football are important for understanding how fans construct various group identities and how specific socio-cultural contexts influence the perception of race-related controversies . Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. The Rangers coach Steven Gerrard used this phrase when talking about the key incident during his press conference on 18 March 2021: “You could say it’s been a test. I’ve tried to handle the situation in the best way I can but one thing that’s non-negotiable for me is the support for my players. I said last night that some things happen along your way as a player, a coach or a manager that aren’t really football related; they’re bigger than football or a different issue from football”. (Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfkc9NfIoys, time 8.22)2. Schmid, “The Definition of Racism”; Weaver, “Liquid Racism and the Ambiguity of Ali G”.3. van Dijk, “Racist Discourse”.4. Back et al., “Racism in Football”, 77.5. Gavins and Simpson, “Regina v John Terry”.6. Wolfers et al., “Just Because He’s Black”; Wolfers, “Self-directed Racialized Humor”.7. Back et al., “Racism in Football”, 77.8. Or, what Johansson (“Everyday Opinions in News Discussion Forums”) refers to as “everyday opinion” or “public vernacular discourse”.9. See Wrench and Garrett, “Constructions of ‘Whiteness’”; Kroon, “Recontextualizing Racism and Segregation”.10. See, for instance, Cleland, “Racism, Football Fans, and Online Message Boards”.11. Scholarly interest in online newspaper reader comments boards typically adopts a CDA perspective and concentrates on a single set of data (e.g. British) in order to identify racist themes and discourses (cf. Rowe and Goodman (“A Stinking Filthy Race of People”), Santana (“Virtuous or Vitriolic”), Harlow (“Story-chatterers Stirring Up Hate”), Catalano and Fielder (“European Spaces and the Roma”), Chovanec (“Irony as Counter Positioning”); and similar studies on social media data, e.g. Breazu and Machin (“Racism Toward the Rom","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"20 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"135815216","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-20DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2256231
Sigbjørn Skirbekk
The increasing use of VAR globally affects the refereeing role and may have unintended gendered consequences for referees. This scoping review 1) summarizes and maps the research on refereeing, gender, and VAR in football, 2) identifies and analyzes knowledge gaps in the field, and 3) suggests recommendations for practice, and future research. The review indicates that the combination of gender and technology, and how they impact the refereeing role, is not featured in research. Instead, VAR studies mainly focus on the outcome of decisions, while research on gender and refereeing concerns individual experiences of female referees. The review further shows the implementation of certain technologies in football, and their consequences for male and female referees, has not received the scholarly attention it deserves. Future studies should utilize organizational, intersectional, and medial perspectives to understand how VAR and other novel refereeing technologies can be used to achieve gender equity in refereeing.
{"title":"Video Assistant Referee (VAR), gender and football refereeing: a scoping review","authors":"Sigbjørn Skirbekk","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2256231","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2256231","url":null,"abstract":"The increasing use of VAR globally affects the refereeing role and may have unintended gendered consequences for referees. This scoping review 1) summarizes and maps the research on refereeing, gender, and VAR in football, 2) identifies and analyzes knowledge gaps in the field, and 3) suggests recommendations for practice, and future research. The review indicates that the combination of gender and technology, and how they impact the refereeing role, is not featured in research. Instead, VAR studies mainly focus on the outcome of decisions, while research on gender and refereeing concerns individual experiences of female referees. The review further shows the implementation of certain technologies in football, and their consequences for male and female referees, has not received the scholarly attention it deserves. Future studies should utilize organizational, intersectional, and medial perspectives to understand how VAR and other novel refereeing technologies can be used to achieve gender equity in refereeing.","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"58 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"136308135","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-14DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2250658
Marcus Callies, Melanie Fleischhacker, Eva-Maria Graf
is essentially unnatural
{"title":"The language and discourse(s) of football. Interdisciplinary and cross-modal perspectives: introduction to the thematic issue","authors":"Marcus Callies, Melanie Fleischhacker, Eva-Maria Graf","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2250658","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2250658","url":null,"abstract":"is essentially unnatural","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"359 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"134913186","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-14DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2246780
Phil Martin, Graham Curry
ABSTRACTThis article traces the life of a football club at the forefront of the game’s initial development in the late 1850s and early 1860s. Dingley Dell’s football arm was founded in 1858 but disappeared from view in 1864, during which time they engaged mainly in matches against the schools of Westminster and Charterhouse. However, their history has been sorely neglected and this paper is designed to redress that balance. The most significant question Dingley Dell’s existence poses is why they failed to send a representative to the early meetings of the Football Association in late 1863. Yet, in a story full of contradictions, even their absence appears open to question. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Dingley Dell were rarely referred to as a “Football” club, probably because they also played cricket, and several players were involved in both teams. For instance, Anthony John Anstruther Wilkinson and Algernon Rutter were part of the team that were narrowly defeated by South Essex in May 1863 (Bell’s Life, May 24, 1863).2. Readers will note part of the title of this article as being borrowed from Winston Churchill’s description – “a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma” - of the Soviet Union in 1939.3. An athenaeum in Ancient Greece was the name given to a building dedicated to the goddess Athena where poets and authors gathered to discuss their work. In Victorian England, they were buildings which housed newspaper and periodicals. They were also centres for sport. Indeed, Hulme Athenaeum in Manchester has been identified as being the first football club in that area, probably being founded as early as 1863 (James, Emergence of Footballing Cultures).4. Manchester Daily Examiner and Times, November 201,857.5. Manchester Courier, July 20, 1861.6. Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.7. See Charterhouse versus Dingley Dell cricket report in Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.8. Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.9. Ibid, December 12, 1858.10. Sheffield Daily Telegraph, September 7, 1905.11. Bonney’s most comprehensive obituary appears in the Saffron Walden Weekly News on 14 December 1923.12. Bonney, Memories: 17.13. Bell’s Life, February 26, 1860.14. A prestigious award of 48 scholarships at Westminster School decided by an annual competitive examination. Depending on the monarch, they are named either Queen’s or King’s Scholars.15. Bell’s Life, December 9, 1860.16. Ibid, February 2, 1862.17. Ibid., February 23, 1862.18. Ibid, February 23, 1862.19. Ibid., March 9, 1862.20. Ibid.21. The Field, March 15, 1862.22. Bell’s Life, November 2, 1862.23. Ibid., November 23, 1862.24. Interestingly, Cobb’s son Edward attended Eton and Trinity, Cambridge.25. Foster’s school was quite hard to find, as it is neither mentioned in Joseph Foster’s Men-at-the-Bar nor the records of Christ Church, Oxford. However, his obituary is included in the Bedfordshire Times and Independent - as in similar obituaries, there is no ment
{"title":"Dingley Dell: a conundrum, within a puzzle, hiding behind a contradiction","authors":"Phil Martin, Graham Curry","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2246780","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2246780","url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTThis article traces the life of a football club at the forefront of the game’s initial development in the late 1850s and early 1860s. Dingley Dell’s football arm was founded in 1858 but disappeared from view in 1864, during which time they engaged mainly in matches against the schools of Westminster and Charterhouse. However, their history has been sorely neglected and this paper is designed to redress that balance. The most significant question Dingley Dell’s existence poses is why they failed to send a representative to the early meetings of the Football Association in late 1863. Yet, in a story full of contradictions, even their absence appears open to question. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Dingley Dell were rarely referred to as a “Football” club, probably because they also played cricket, and several players were involved in both teams. For instance, Anthony John Anstruther Wilkinson and Algernon Rutter were part of the team that were narrowly defeated by South Essex in May 1863 (Bell’s Life, May 24, 1863).2. Readers will note part of the title of this article as being borrowed from Winston Churchill’s description – “a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma” - of the Soviet Union in 1939.3. An athenaeum in Ancient Greece was the name given to a building dedicated to the goddess Athena where poets and authors gathered to discuss their work. In Victorian England, they were buildings which housed newspaper and periodicals. They were also centres for sport. Indeed, Hulme Athenaeum in Manchester has been identified as being the first football club in that area, probably being founded as early as 1863 (James, Emergence of Footballing Cultures).4. Manchester Daily Examiner and Times, November 201,857.5. Manchester Courier, July 20, 1861.6. Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.7. See Charterhouse versus Dingley Dell cricket report in Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.8. Bell’s Life, June 27, 1858.9. Ibid, December 12, 1858.10. Sheffield Daily Telegraph, September 7, 1905.11. Bonney’s most comprehensive obituary appears in the Saffron Walden Weekly News on 14 December 1923.12. Bonney, Memories: 17.13. Bell’s Life, February 26, 1860.14. A prestigious award of 48 scholarships at Westminster School decided by an annual competitive examination. Depending on the monarch, they are named either Queen’s or King’s Scholars.15. Bell’s Life, December 9, 1860.16. Ibid, February 2, 1862.17. Ibid., February 23, 1862.18. Ibid, February 23, 1862.19. Ibid., March 9, 1862.20. Ibid.21. The Field, March 15, 1862.22. Bell’s Life, November 2, 1862.23. Ibid., November 23, 1862.24. Interestingly, Cobb’s son Edward attended Eton and Trinity, Cambridge.25. Foster’s school was quite hard to find, as it is neither mentioned in Joseph Foster’s Men-at-the-Bar nor the records of Christ Church, Oxford. However, his obituary is included in the Bedfordshire Times and Independent - as in similar obituaries, there is no ment","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"131 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"134913165","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-13DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2250662
Kieran File, Thomas Worlledge
In this article, we critically assess a common discourse of the football fan as hooligan, with the help of insights generated from a linguistic ethnography of football fan behaviour in one of their natural environments – the football stadium during a live match. Football fans have long been stereotypically understood through notions of hooliganism, with violent and aggressive behaviour frequently identified as a marker of this social group. However, researchers like Gary Armstrong have begun to problematize these discourses, claiming that only a tiny minority of football fans are in fact violent. In this article, we contribute to these efforts by drawing on insights gathered from a linguistic ethnography of football fans at an English, League 1 professional football club – Burton Albion Football Club. Researchers collected over 10 h of observational data, primarily in the form of field notes that documented all manner of fan behaviour – including songs, talk directed at players on the field, interactions amongst fans, reactions to on field events – across different sections of the stadium. The findings not only challenge the stereotypical notion of the football fan as hooligan, but they also highlight distinct subcultures being constructed within the same stadium through different behavioural tendencies and expectations regarding acceptable behaviour. These findings not only illustrate that the view of football fans as hooligans is uncritical and unsophisticated, but that our broader understanding of football fans is under theorized. Empirical insights of the kind provided by linguistic ethnographic work can help to challenge unchecked discourses about football fans that are perpetuated without a well-founded evidence base and help locate new dimensions for studying this important group of people in the wider football landscape.
{"title":"Fan identity and football culture: locating variation in the discursive performance of football fan identities in a UK stadium","authors":"Kieran File, Thomas Worlledge","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2250662","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2250662","url":null,"abstract":"In this article, we critically assess a common discourse of the football fan as hooligan, with the help of insights generated from a linguistic ethnography of football fan behaviour in one of their natural environments – the football stadium during a live match. Football fans have long been stereotypically understood through notions of hooliganism, with violent and aggressive behaviour frequently identified as a marker of this social group. However, researchers like Gary Armstrong have begun to problematize these discourses, claiming that only a tiny minority of football fans are in fact violent. In this article, we contribute to these efforts by drawing on insights gathered from a linguistic ethnography of football fans at an English, League 1 professional football club – Burton Albion Football Club. Researchers collected over 10 h of observational data, primarily in the form of field notes that documented all manner of fan behaviour – including songs, talk directed at players on the field, interactions amongst fans, reactions to on field events – across different sections of the stadium. The findings not only challenge the stereotypical notion of the football fan as hooligan, but they also highlight distinct subcultures being constructed within the same stadium through different behavioural tendencies and expectations regarding acceptable behaviour. These findings not only illustrate that the view of football fans as hooligans is uncritical and unsophisticated, but that our broader understanding of football fans is under theorized. Empirical insights of the kind provided by linguistic ethnographic work can help to challenge unchecked discourses about football fans that are perpetuated without a well-founded evidence base and help locate new dimensions for studying this important group of people in the wider football landscape.","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"108 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"135784906","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}
Pub Date : 2023-09-11DOI: 10.1080/14660970.2023.2256232
Nathan D’Hoore, Jeroen Scheerder
This article seeks to critically examine the paradoxical coexistence of social benefits and the perpetuation of racism in Belgian club-organised junior football. In doing so, this article begins by providing a literature review of racism in junior football and describes the social, historical, and political context in which the research is taking place. Subsequently, we draw on 15 semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders in Belgian club-organised football about their personal experiences with racism to examine attitudes towards race, manifestations of racism, and its formative aspect. Based on the analyses, the article argues that the “white colonial frame” serves as a dominant attitude towards race in Belgian club-organised football. Ultimately, this cultural place does not inherently entail social progression or transformation, rather it reinscribes the dominant racial frame and sustains a status quo. Social progression seems only achievable through the decolonisation of ideologies and reform of social norms.
{"title":"Football for development, an arena for imperial hierarchies? Racism, the ‘white colonial frame’, and junior football in Belgium","authors":"Nathan D’Hoore, Jeroen Scheerder","doi":"10.1080/14660970.2023.2256232","DOIUrl":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14660970.2023.2256232","url":null,"abstract":"This article seeks to critically examine the paradoxical coexistence of social benefits and the perpetuation of racism in Belgian club-organised junior football. In doing so, this article begins by providing a literature review of racism in junior football and describes the social, historical, and political context in which the research is taking place. Subsequently, we draw on 15 semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders in Belgian club-organised football about their personal experiences with racism to examine attitudes towards race, manifestations of racism, and its formative aspect. Based on the analyses, the article argues that the “white colonial frame” serves as a dominant attitude towards race in Belgian club-organised football. Ultimately, this cultural place does not inherently entail social progression or transformation, rather it reinscribes the dominant racial frame and sustains a status quo. Social progression seems only achievable through the decolonisation of ideologies and reform of social norms.","PeriodicalId":47395,"journal":{"name":"Soccer & Society","volume":"68 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2023-09-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":null,"resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":"135939266","PeriodicalName":null,"FirstCategoryId":null,"ListUrlMain":null,"RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":"","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":"","EPubDate":null,"PubModel":null,"JCR":null,"JCRName":null,"Score":null,"Total":0}