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This book explores the various ways in which participation in sport and physical activity might contribute to effective solutions within criminal justice systems.
List of contents
Introduction: Sport, Physical Activity, and Criminal Justice; Part I: Policy and Strategic Responses; 1. The History and Development of Policy for Sport and Physical Activity in Youth and Adult Prisons; 2. Adverse Childhood Experiences, Mentoring, and ‘At Risk’ Youth; 3. Examining the Role of Partnership within Sport and Physical Activity Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation Projects; 4. Sport and Crime Prevention in Canada: Examining Discourses of Risk, Responsibility, and Development through Sport; 5. Using Child-Centred Approaches to Enhance the Evidence Base Around Using Sport-Based Interventions to Reduce Youth Offending; Part II: Sport and Physical Activity Interventions in Custodial Settings; 6. Co-Creating a Sport-Life Skills Programme for Incarcerated Youth; 7. Using Sport-Based Interventions to Benefit the Mental Well-Being of People in Prison; 8. Applying Kaupapa Māori Principles to Positive Youth Development: Insights from a New Zealand Youth Justice Facility; 9. Sport and Physical Activity Inside (and Outside of) the Youth Secure Estate; 10. The Perceived Impact of Sport and Physical Activity Programmes: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the Experiences of Gym Orderlies in a UK Women’s Prison; Part III: Community-Based Sport and Physical Activity Interventions; 11. The Acquisition of Capital Through Sport and Physical Activity: Qualifications, Connections, and Self-Reliance; 12. Cure De Jour: Exploring the Potential of Boxing as a Mechanism for Change Among Vulnerable Groups; 13. Midnight Football as a Site of Surveillance: Activities Observed by the Surrounding Institutions of Society; Conclusions: Sport, Physical Activity and Criminal Justice – Towards a New Research Agenda
About the author
Haydn Morgan is Senior Lecturer in Sport Management in the Department for Health at the University of Bath, UK. Haydn’s research concerns the connection between participation in sport and physical activity and the enhancement of social inclusion and wellbeing in marginalized populations.
Andrew Parker is Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Business and Law at the University of the West of England, UK. Andrew’s research interests focus on sport and disadvantaged youth, and he has undertaken research and evaluation studies of sport-based initiatives both in community and custodial settings.
Summary
This book explores the various ways in which participation in sport and physical activity might contribute to effective solutions within criminal justice systems.