Sport-For-Development Organizational Hybridity: From Differentiated to Dysfunctional

in Journal of Sport Management

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Katherine RawWestern Sydney University

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Emma SherrySwinburne University of Technology

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Katie RoweDeakin University

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Despite recent advances in sport-for-development (SFD) literature, few scholars have empirically examined organizational hybridity in SFD contexts. This is despite hybrid organizational approaches becoming increasingly common in the delivery of SFD initiatives. Opportunities exist for researchers to build knowledge regarding SFD hybrids, particularly those which operate in professional sport contexts. In this research, we examine an SFD organization, delivered by a professional sport team, which operates under a hybrid structure. A longitudinal qualitative case study design was employed, and findings demonstrate how the SFD organization, which presents a practical example of organizational hybridity, evolved over time. Drawing upon Svensson typologies of SFD hybrids, results illustrate how the organization transformed from a differentiated hybrid into a dysfunctional hybrid, under the influence of funding opportunities and institutional logics. Through the present study, we build upon theoretical understandings of SFD hybrids and offer practical insight into the nuances of SFD hybrids delivered in professional sport contexts.

Raw is with Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, Australia. Sherry is with the Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Rowe is with Deakin University, Burwood, Victoria, Australia.

Sherry (esherry@swin.edu.au) is corresponding author.
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