most Western democratic nations sees elite sport prioritized in policy processes, and assumptions are that mass sport participation will benefit via a trickle-down effect • Due to the federated structures and regularity of organized sport occurrence, sport networks are characterized by permanency
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Alana Thomson, Kristine Toohey, and Simon Darcy
assumptions within the field, such as the so-called “trickle-down effect,” which, to date, remains unverified, and the infamous “Goldman Dilemma,” which is at the foundation of some of the unfounded fears that many young athletes are using performance-enhancing drugs. What confounds the issue is that
Matthew Juravich and Brian M. Mills
hypothesizing. Through the onset of a development logic, we propose that player talent dispersion has been impacted across all organizations comprising the field while parity at the team level has also been affected. Specifically, we propose a trickle-down effect of player talent dispersion that has directly
Jared F.K. Monaghan and Claudio M. Rocha
citizen frequency of participation post-Olympics ( Kokolakakis et al., 2019 ; Potwarka & Wicker, 2021 ). The so-called trickle-down effect suggests that, although unlikely to inspire sedentary people to get active, hosting Olympic Games can inspire active people to become even more active and the
Lucy V. Piggott and Jordan J.K. Matthews
leadership styles than men ( Eagly, Johannesen-Schmidt, & van Engen, 2003 ). Within sport, researchers have argued that women bring new and different perspectives and ideas to the boardroom and improve the atmosphere of meetings ( Pfister, 2010 ), as well as creating a trickle-down effect resulting in more
Jens De Rycke, Veerle De Bosscher, Hiroaki Funahashi, and Popi Sotiriadou
( 2 ), 263 – 279 . 10.1080/17430430500087328 Frick , B. , & Wicker , P. ( 2016 ). The trickle-down effect: How elite sporting success affects amateur participation in German football . Applied Economics Letters, 23 ( 4 ), 259 – 263 . doi:10.1080/13504851.2015.1068916 10
Pamela Wicker and Paul Downward
commuter” and the happy sport tourist? European Sport Management Quarterly . Advance online publication. doi:10.1080/16184742.2019.1613439 10.1080/16184742.2019.1613439 Wicker , P. , & Frick , B. ( 2016 ). Recruitment and retention of referees in nonprofit sport organizations: The trickle-down