Article

Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society?

Details

Citation

Chamberlain JM (2013) Sports-based intervention and the problem of youth offending: a diverse enough tool for a diverse society?. Sport in Society, 16 (10), pp. 1279-1292. https://doi.org/10.1080/17430437.2013.821251

Abstract
This paper discusses sports-based interventions(SBIs)and the problem of youth crime. It notes the positive role sport can play in changing to better the lives of young people. However, there is a lack of robust evidence to support the argument that participation in sporting activity can lead to a reduction in anti-social and offending behaviour. The paper discusses how through focusing on ‘individual needs’ and ‘pathways to work’, SBIs can become overly reductionist and mask broader structural class-, gender-and race-based inequalities that permeate through neoliberal nation-states and western criminal justice systems. It concludes that SBI advocates must seek to promote a less homogeneous idea of what an SBI is, as well as be more sensitive to the diverse needs of young people, particularly if they are to tackle the underlying structural inequalities that arguably create the social problem that is youth crime in the first place.

Keywords
Cultural Studies

Journal
Sport in Society: Volume 16, Issue 10

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2013
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN1743-0437
eISSN1743-0445

People (1)

People

Dr Marty Chamberlain

Dr Marty Chamberlain

Lecturer in Criminology, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

Research programmes

Research centres/groups

Research themes