Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG): Moving towards gender equality in sports governance

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG) : Moving towards gender equality in sports governance. / Evans, Adam B.; Henderson, Hannah.

Why Does Sociology Matter?: The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport, 2022. s. 213-2013 266.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportKonferenceabstrakt i proceedingsForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Evans, AB & Henderson, H 2022, Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG): Moving towards gender equality in sports governance. i Why Does Sociology Matter?: The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research., 266, European Association for the Sociology of Sport, s. 213-2013, EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport, Tubingen, Tyskland, 07/06/2022. <https://issaeass2022.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/eass-ISSA-2022-Congress-Abstract-Book-2022.05.26.pdf>

APA

Evans, A. B., & Henderson, H. (2022). Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG): Moving towards gender equality in sports governance. I Why Does Sociology Matter?: The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research (s. 213-2013). [266] European Association for the Sociology of Sport. https://issaeass2022.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/eass-ISSA-2022-Congress-Abstract-Book-2022.05.26.pdf

Vancouver

Evans AB, Henderson H. Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG): Moving towards gender equality in sports governance. I Why Does Sociology Matter?: The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport. 2022. s. 213-2013. 266

Author

Evans, Adam B. ; Henderson, Hannah. / Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG) : Moving towards gender equality in sports governance. Why Does Sociology Matter?: The Role of Sport Sociology in Interdisciplinary Research. European Association for the Sociology of Sport, 2022. s. 213-2013

Bibtex

@inbook{8c47d8db1b3a4d10bacf01d6fd68d085,
title = "Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG): Moving towards gender equality in sports governance",
abstract = "Gender equality in sports governance remains a distant goal, with the pace of progress described by some as {\textquoteright}glacial.{\textquoteright} Gender Inequality is common at all levels of sport governance, including at the global, organizational-cultural and interpersonal scales. The ERASMUS+-funded SWinG programme represented one attempt to challenge this inequality by developing of a model for change, and through mentoring and empowering women to run for election in sports governance. Ten multi-sectorial programme partners developed and piloted a new, transferable approach to support aspiring women leaders to be elected into decision-making positions. As part of the programme, a mentoring programme aligned 20 aspiring sports leaders with 20 women leaders from the business sector over three years across Europe. We evaluated the programme using a multi-method, naturalistic evaluation approach utilizing data from multi-point semi-structured interviews and focus groups, analysis of administrative records, timelines and meeting records, and evaluative surveys. The nine intellectual outputs, webinars and written resources produced during the programme were well received. Moreover, despite significant disruption to the programme and many elections due to COVID-19, many programme goals were achieved. Only two mentees did not progress as intended, whilst eight were elected to decision-making positions and a further six moved towards this goal. Notably, mentees{\textquoteright} initial misgivings were assuaged by mentors, who often had different perspectives on barriers to election. Although change was primarily enacted at the interpersonal level during SWinG, future work will focus upon challenging the wider socio-cultural context of gender inequality in sports governance.",
author = "Evans, {Adam B.} and Hannah Henderson",
note = "(Abstract); EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport : The role of sport sociology in interdisciplinary research, EASS/ISSA 2022 ; Conference date: 07-06-2022 Through 10-06-2022",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
pages = "213--2013",
booktitle = "Why Does Sociology Matter?",
publisher = "European Association for the Sociology of Sport",
url = "https://issaeass2022.com/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Supporting Women in Achieving Their Goals (SWinG)

T2 - EASS and ISSA World Congress of Sociology of Sport

AU - Evans, Adam B.

AU - Henderson, Hannah

N1 - (Abstract)

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Gender equality in sports governance remains a distant goal, with the pace of progress described by some as ’glacial.’ Gender Inequality is common at all levels of sport governance, including at the global, organizational-cultural and interpersonal scales. The ERASMUS+-funded SWinG programme represented one attempt to challenge this inequality by developing of a model for change, and through mentoring and empowering women to run for election in sports governance. Ten multi-sectorial programme partners developed and piloted a new, transferable approach to support aspiring women leaders to be elected into decision-making positions. As part of the programme, a mentoring programme aligned 20 aspiring sports leaders with 20 women leaders from the business sector over three years across Europe. We evaluated the programme using a multi-method, naturalistic evaluation approach utilizing data from multi-point semi-structured interviews and focus groups, analysis of administrative records, timelines and meeting records, and evaluative surveys. The nine intellectual outputs, webinars and written resources produced during the programme were well received. Moreover, despite significant disruption to the programme and many elections due to COVID-19, many programme goals were achieved. Only two mentees did not progress as intended, whilst eight were elected to decision-making positions and a further six moved towards this goal. Notably, mentees’ initial misgivings were assuaged by mentors, who often had different perspectives on barriers to election. Although change was primarily enacted at the interpersonal level during SWinG, future work will focus upon challenging the wider socio-cultural context of gender inequality in sports governance.

AB - Gender equality in sports governance remains a distant goal, with the pace of progress described by some as ’glacial.’ Gender Inequality is common at all levels of sport governance, including at the global, organizational-cultural and interpersonal scales. The ERASMUS+-funded SWinG programme represented one attempt to challenge this inequality by developing of a model for change, and through mentoring and empowering women to run for election in sports governance. Ten multi-sectorial programme partners developed and piloted a new, transferable approach to support aspiring women leaders to be elected into decision-making positions. As part of the programme, a mentoring programme aligned 20 aspiring sports leaders with 20 women leaders from the business sector over three years across Europe. We evaluated the programme using a multi-method, naturalistic evaluation approach utilizing data from multi-point semi-structured interviews and focus groups, analysis of administrative records, timelines and meeting records, and evaluative surveys. The nine intellectual outputs, webinars and written resources produced during the programme were well received. Moreover, despite significant disruption to the programme and many elections due to COVID-19, many programme goals were achieved. Only two mentees did not progress as intended, whilst eight were elected to decision-making positions and a further six moved towards this goal. Notably, mentees’ initial misgivings were assuaged by mentors, who often had different perspectives on barriers to election. Although change was primarily enacted at the interpersonal level during SWinG, future work will focus upon challenging the wider socio-cultural context of gender inequality in sports governance.

M3 - Conference abstract in proceedings

SP - 213

EP - 2013

BT - Why Does Sociology Matter?

PB - European Association for the Sociology of Sport

Y2 - 7 June 2022 through 10 June 2022

ER -

ID: 320868545