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Handbook on Sport and Migration

Edited by: Joseph Maguire, Katie Liston, Mark Falcous

ISBN13: 9781789909401
Published: September 2024
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £190.00



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This insightful Handbook explores how sport intersects the experiences of asylum seekers, refugees, workers and migrants. Editors Joseph Maguire, Katie Liston and Mark Falcous bring together esteemed experts to capture the complex dynamics surrounding how sport migrations are embedded in the wider power struggles that characterize global sport.

Analysing a range of case studies across the globe, chapter authors examine the control exercised by various stakeholders, both sporting and non-sporting, and how their actions contour migration experiences. They cover matters such as globalization, national identity, and intercultural communication, as well as in-depth issues including talent pipelines, bridgeheads and the stereotyping of athletes from different class, ethnic and gender groups. The dynamics of sports migration are highlighted when revealing the tensions concerning the promotion of commercial spectacle versus the advocacy of national and local identities, and the search for short term viability versus longer term development.

The Handbook on Sport and Migration is invaluable for students and scholars of sport law, sociology, migration, policy and globalization. It will also appeal to those working in sport management, sport psychology, exercise sciences, kinesiology, and international migration policy.

Subjects:
Sports Law, Immigration, Asylum, Refugee and Nationality Law
Contents:
Introduction: making sense of sport, space, place, identities and migration 1
Joseph Maguire, Katie Liston and Mark Falcous

PART I. SPORTING MOBILITIES: CONTINUITY AND CHANGE
1. Geography, migration and sport 11
Nicholas Wise
2. Football mobilities: a global player transfer market 22
Rafaelle Poli, Roger Besson and Loïc Ravenel
3. Soccer migration from Trinidad and Tobago: the case of the NASL, 1968–1984 38
Roy McCree
4. Athletes’ migration in Brazil: social inequality and intersectionality as possible analytical dimensions 49
Renato Francisco Rodrigues Marques and Wanderley Marchi Júnior
5. Sport labour migrants out of Africa 62
Jepkorir Rose Chepyator-Thomson, Abdulsamad Yusuf, Sean Seiler and Chenelle Goyen
6. Fijian migrant athletes in the world of professional rugby 73
Dominik Schieder
7. Exceptionalism and sport migration: the North American perspective 86
Alan Klein

PART II. SPORTING SPACES, PLACES AND IDENTITIES
8. Sport, migration and gender 96
Sine Agergaard
9. ‘A field of broken dreams?’: the precarious social realities of male migrant footballers from Northern Ireland 104
Ryan Adams, Paul Darby and Katie Liston
10. “Outsiders within”: sport, naturalisation, and the construction of black Korean runners 114
Yeomi Choi
11. International student-athletes and the basketball world system: African talent pipelines and Japanese pathways 123
Naoki Chiba and Mark Falcous
12. Sports migration to Gulf Cooperation Council states: the intersection of economic growth and sport development 140
Mahfoud Amara and Gerard Akindes
13. Navigators for the new millennium: towards a view of the global Samoan sports diaspora 150
Lisa Uperesa
14. Cultural hybridity, simultaneous embeddedness and the complexities of capoeira in New Zealand 162
Janelle Joseph and Mark Falcous

PART III. GOVERNANCE, REGULATION AND BOUNDARIES
15. Sport, migration, nation-states, and the sports-medical industrial complex 176
Joseph Maguire
16. From imported athletes to home-grown talents: long-term residents in Qatari national sports teams 187
Zahra Babar and Danyel Reiche
17. Regulation or encouragement? China’s labour migration policies for table tennis, basketball and football players 197
Yu-Wen Chen and Tien-Chin Tan
18. African football labour migration: governance, impact, and consequences 207
Wycliffe W. Simiyu Njororai
19. The diversification of the composition of national football teams 218
Gijs Van Campenhout
20. Import–export value variance in Czech sport 229
William Crossan
21. Out of control: professional footballers, migration, and the consequences for mental health 242
Richard Elliott

PART IV. IMMIGRATIONS, REFUGEES AND CONTROLS
22. Informal sport migration as a process of becoming: a digital ethnography of young Gazan parkour athletes 253
Holly Thorpe
23. Moving through paradox: forced migration, liminality, and sports 265
Maikel Waardenburg
24. Trying to insert themselves as a square peg into a round hole: experiences of newcomers as coaches in the Canadian amateur sport system 274
Lori A. Livingston
25. Sport, return visits and transnational identity: South Korean-New Zealanders’
participation in the Korean National Sports Festival 285
Ik Young Chang, Kyu Jin Jin and Steven J. Jackson
26. Sport, refugees and forced migration: critical dialogues and questions amid diminishing rights and expanding borders 295
Nicola De Martini Ugolotti
27. Children’s rights, sport and migration 307
Eleanor Drywood, Paul Darby, James Esson, Carolynne Mason and Serhat Yilmaz