Sexual Harassment or Just Coaching? Sport Students Making Sense of Possibly Sexualising Coach Behaviours
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28454Dato
2022-11-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Research has shown that athletes are divided in their assessment of possibly sexualising
behaviours from coaches towards athletes. How they arrive at their conclusions has received less
attention—yet it is crucial to understand as a basis for safeguarding measures. Using video-elicitation
focus group interviews with sport students, we zoomed in on different types of ‘grey area’ situations
involving coaches and athletes. We drew on social script theory to highlight the cultural tools sport
students use to distinguish between acceptable and unacceptable coaching behaviours. Our analyses
showed that the students drew on two types of scripts in their interpretative work: (1) sport scripts,
denoting templates for ‘normal’ coach–athlete interactions (typically with a performance and/or
caring rationale), and (2) sexual harassment scripts, encompassing beliefs and expectations of how
sexual transgressions play out and among whom. We discuss how the students evaluated concrete
grey area situations by comparing and contrasting them with both scripts. In these assessments, the
students relied on cues and clues from the portrayed interactions, including the gender of the coach
and athlete and knowledge about the specific sport setting. Our analyses demonstrate how views
about sexual harassment in sport relate to the specificities of the sport setting and the gendered social
dynamics in the situation.
Forlag
MDPISitering
Strandbu, Solstad, Stefansen, Sandvik. Sexual Harassment or Just Coaching? Sport Students Making Sense of Possibly Sexualising Coach Behaviours. Social Sciences. 2022Metadata
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