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Sport Advocacy: The Art of Persuasion and Its By-Products

Cecilia Stenling and Michael Sam

, not new in the sociology of sport. An early contribution is Sage’s ( 1999 ) study of the actions undertaken by the Nike Transactional Advocacy Framework , and this has been followed by studies documenting collective action to counter social inequality (e.g.,  Harvey, Horne, & Safai, 2009 ; Scherer

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Policy and Advocacy in Physical Education: Looking Back, Looking Forward

Risto Marttinen and Aaron Beighle

variables are analyzed and the decisions made for each are often guided by policy, or laws that drive the educational system. The policies are often influenced by advocacy efforts designed to educate and garner support from decision makers. Unfortunately, in the case of physical education (PE), many past

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“The Most Important Shot You Will Ever Take”: The Burgeoning Role of Social Media Activism in Challenging Embedded NCAA Patriarchy

Sarah Stokowski, Allison B. Smith, Alison Fridley, Chris Corr, and Amanda L. Paule-Koba

within global society, however, has provided a platform for marginalized groups to engage in advocacy initiatives ( Antunovic, 2022 ; Goldkind & McNutt, 2016 ; Guo & Saxton, 2014 ; Nartey, 2022 ; Saxton et al., 2015 ). As such, the present study sought to examine social media engagement and

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“To Build a More Just Society”: Women’s National Basketball Association Teams’ Uses of Social Media for Advocacy

Dunja Antunovic, Ann Pegoraro, Ceyda Mumcu, Kimberly Soltis, Nancy Lough, Katie Lebel, and Nicole M. LaVoi

years as reflected in broadcast rights, sponsorship deals, athlete activism, and digital innovation ( Lough et al., 2022 ). The WNBA provides a unique context because players and teams have actively engaged in social justice advocacy—and even collective political activism ( Cox, 2022 ; Delevoye, 2020

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Justice Do It! The Nike Transnational Advocacy Network: Organization, Collective Actions, and Outcomes

George H. Sage

The focus of this study is on the organizational dynamics, collective actions, and outcomes of a transnational advocacy network that was formed to protest the labor practices of Nike’s sport shoe factories in Asia. Transnational advocacy networks arise and are sustained with the intent of changing social conditions. The Nike transnational network sought to improve the lives of workers in Nike factories in Asia so that they have jobs that pay a living wage, have good working conditions, can organize on their own behalf, and are treated with dignity and respect. A broad theoretical perspective that emphasizes the determinant and interactive effects of the emergence, development, and accomplishments of the Nike transnational network is employed.

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Advocacy From the Liberal Feminist Playbook: The Framing of Title IX and Women’s Sports in News Releases From the Women’s Sports Foundation

Barbara Barnett and Marie C. Hardin

Since Title IX was enacted in 1972, women’s advocates have considered how the law has affected female participation in sports, and critics have suggested that the law has unfairly denied opportunities to men. Studies have examined how journalists have covered Title IX and its consequences, yet few have looked at how advocacy groups have sought to influence coverage of the law. This textual analysis examines press statements published by the Women’s Sports Foundation from 2004 through 2009 and concludes that the organization used frames of community and transcendence in discussing women’s athletic participation. The foundation characterized community as essential to the support of women’s participation in sports and suggested that participation and achievement in sports were symbolic of women’s accomplishments in the larger society. The foundation also focused on fairness and equality as rationales for equitable distribution of resources and opportunities. Title IX was rarely mentioned in press statements.

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A Constant Balancing Act: Delivering Sustainable University Instructional Physical Activity Programs

Sheri J. Brock, Christina Beaudoin, Mark G. Urtel, Lisa L. Hicks, and Jared A. Russell

advocacy and potential opportunities. Institution Descriptions In this section, the authors provide a description of the universities represented in this paper. The intent of the descriptions is to provide a frame of reference for the challenges and opportunities introduced, as experienced within IPAPs of

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#Fight4UNCWSwimandDive: A Case Study of How College Athletes Used Twitter to Help Save Their Teams

Kevin Hull

This study explored how student-athletes at UNC-Wilmington (UNCW) used Twitter to help save their swimming and diving teams from being eliminated. Both a series of interviews and a content analysis of 1,775 tweets by 25 athletes were conducted. The results suggest that athletes and advocates can use Twitter to raise awareness about their cause. The UNCW athletes’ goal to demonstrate community support by alerting as many people as possible through social media was achieved through tweeting consistently, becoming opinion leaders in the two-step flow of information, and using weak ties to get followers of other accounts to rally behind their cause. Limitations and directions for future research are also discussed.

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Promoting Physical Activity Education Through General Education: Looking Back and Moving Forward

Bradley J. Cardinal

Concerns about college and university student health date back to at least the mid-19th century. These concerns were addressed through the development and implementation of required, service-based physical activity education programs. In the 1920s–1930s, 97% of American colleges and universities offered such programs. Today less than 40% do. However, student health issues persist. This essay asserts that kinesiology departments are best suited to address these needs by delivering physical activity education courses through their institution’s general education curriculum. General education courses are those that every student must take in order to develop the competencies necessary for living a full and complete life and contributing to society. Given the growing costs of higher education, any such requirement must be justifiable. Therefore, implementing and sustaining a physical activity education general education requirement is not for the faint of heart; it requires effort, resources, support, and time. This essay explores these issues.

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Ecological Modernization and the 2014 NHL Sustainability Report

jay johnson and Adam Ehsan Ali

advocacy, it also illustrates the malleability of neoliberal governance in response to environmental issues that should seemingly challenge its logic. The NHL’s most important tactics in this instance are first to implement these periphery adjustments, which are then celebrated as significant environmental