Women's rugby for all: Toward an intersectional women's rugby research agenda

被引:1
|
作者
Mkumbuzi, Nonhlanhla Sharon [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Northumbria Univ, Dept Sport Exercise & Rehabil, Newcastle Upon Tyne, England
[2] Nelson Mandela Univ, Dept Human Movement Sci, Gqeberha, South Africa
[3] Midlands State Univ, Dept Rehabil, Gweru, Zimbabwe
[4] NtombiSport PTY Ltd, Cape Town, South Africa
关键词
critical race theory; DEI in sport; feminist theory; Global South; interdisciplinary research; intersectionality; SPORT PSYCHOLOGY; CULTURAL PRAXIS; HEALTH; GENDER; PLAYERS; BLACK; UNION; PARTICIPATION; INEQUALITY; STRATEGIES;
D O I
10.1002/ejsc.12127
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
Women rugby players are participating in the sport at the highest levels to date. However, despite this increase in participation, sports sciences and sports medicine/sports physiotherapy (SEMS) research output has not mirrored this increase. Females have hormonally mediated anatomical and physiological profiles, which may have implications for rugby performance, injury risk and rehabilitation outcomes. However, hormonal fluctuations and the physiological differences between the sexes are not the only contributors to sex-related differences in the rugby experience. Rugby is a highly gendered environment, which operates within a hegemonic masculine norm and marginalises female and women athletes. Further, while women players in general are underrepresented in sports sciences and SEMS research, women rugby players and experts from ethnic minorities and the Global South are near invisible in the literature as they are marginalised on multiple fronts. Sports sciences and SEMS research should take an intersectional lens to investigate the joint relationship between the various sources of inequity in rugby. Intersectional research in women rugby players would encourage the conceptualisation and analysis of the complex social inequalities that the most marginalised women players and those who simultaneously negotiate multiple identities experience. Such data can better inform federation-level interventions and policy changes to address the needs of historically marginalised player populations as our research portfolio will be more representative of the world's rugby population. Women's rugby participation has increased globally. However, despite this increase in female participation, sports sciences and sports and exercise medicine/sports physiotherapy research output has not mirrored this increase in participation. The physiological differences between males and females are not the only contributors to sex-related differences in injury risk, performance or rehabilitation outcomes. The gendered environment, which privileges men and marginalises women, also contributes to these differences. Intersectional rugby research moves beyond the outlook of a strictly biomedical approach to injury, rehabilitation and performance and offers a unique perspective on the broader social, institutional, material and discursive contexts in which the most marginalised women players and those who simultaneously negotiate multiple minority identities participate in rugby.
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页码:1754 / 1764
页数:11
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