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Examining the Use of Postcolonial Management Theory in Sport Management Education: Strategies to Enhance Student Learning of Colonial Histories and Challenge Dominant Ideologies

Mitchell McSweeney, Georgia Teare, and Helen Liu

the sport management industry, for example, event hosting and the metaphor of “legacies.” Whose legacy? Who benefits and/or is negatively affected by a legacy? What is the definition of legacy? This could be particularly applicable to colonial “legacies” of sport. Ethic of care Working with staff

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Exploring (Semi) Professionalization in Women’s Team Sport Through a Continuum of Care Lens

Wendy O’Brien, Tracy Taylor, Clare Hanlon, and Kristine Toohey

through discussions between all authors. Our initial analytic forays were inspired by the work of Gilligan ( 1993 ) and the ethic of care. However, we found that an ethic of care concept and its subsequent development by Tronto ( 1998 ) was too restrictive and did not capture the complexity reflective of

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Running Recession: A Trend Analysis of Running Involvement and Runner Characteristics to Understand Declining Participation

Heather Kennedy, Bradley J. Baker, Jeremy S. Jordan, and Daniel C. Funk

measure the effect of the World Cup on social cohesion . Journal of Sport & Tourism, 20 ( 1 ), 41 – 56 . doi:10.1080/14775085.2016.1175369 10.1080/14775085.2016.1175369 Henderson , K.A. , & Allen , K.R. ( 1991 ). The ethic of care: Leisure possibilities and constraints for women . Loisir et

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The Gendered Experiences of Women Staff and Volunteers in Sport for Development Organizations: The Case of Transmigrant Workers of Skateistan

Holly Thorpe and Megan Chawansky

experiences and understandings of HIC male staff. However, a number of women also mentioned the importance of prearrival conversations and peer mentoring of incoming and new female staff members, and in so doing, suggested the emergence of a feminist ethic of care emerging among female colleagues. For example