This feminist critique interrogates the discourses and practices of gender discrimination in men\u27s professional and collegiate sporting institutions in the United States. This study focuses on delineating and \u27naming\u27 the discriminatory ideologies that are (re)produced by dominant social and cultural institutions, revealing in the process how these practices (over)determine gender equality in the professional and collegiate sporting field. To this end, I perform a post-structuralist discourse analysis of what Louis Althusser calls the dominant \u27ideological state apparatuses,\u27 namely schools, the media and sporting institutions. I argue that these institutions coalesce to form a network of power that produces, reproduces, and ...
The purpose of this phenomenological study is to explore and understand the experiences of female at...
Title IX\u27s three-part test for measuring discrimination in the provision of athletic opportunitie...
Participation in sport does not turn boys from blank slates into men with hard masculine identities....
This feminist critique interrogates the discourses and practices of gender discrimination in men\u27...
Today, women participate in sports that had been previously reserved for men. In the past decade the...
The fight for gender equality for women is still happening even up to this day. Gender inequalities ...
The purpose of this article is to examine gender-based, systematic inequity in sport as reflected in...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Divisi...
Sport is one of the most popular activities and cultural practices in the U.S. It is also a highly g...
More than simply passive members of a hard masculine cult, male athletes and their coaches take up c...
Previous literature has researched the underrepresentation of women as coaches and in other leadersh...
The effect of the implementation of Title IX in American Intercollegiate sports has been one of incr...
Sports have been a male dominated field years, and women have not been acknowledged for their achiev...
Women hold less than 2% of NCAA men’s head coaching positions (Acosta & Carpenter, 2004). Although ...
With its long history as an exclusively male domain, competitive sports stands as a key site for exp...
The purpose of this phenomenological study is to explore and understand the experiences of female at...
Title IX\u27s three-part test for measuring discrimination in the provision of athletic opportunitie...
Participation in sport does not turn boys from blank slates into men with hard masculine identities....
This feminist critique interrogates the discourses and practices of gender discrimination in men\u27...
Today, women participate in sports that had been previously reserved for men. In the past decade the...
The fight for gender equality for women is still happening even up to this day. Gender inequalities ...
The purpose of this article is to examine gender-based, systematic inequity in sport as reflected in...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Divisi...
Sport is one of the most popular activities and cultural practices in the U.S. It is also a highly g...
More than simply passive members of a hard masculine cult, male athletes and their coaches take up c...
Previous literature has researched the underrepresentation of women as coaches and in other leadersh...
The effect of the implementation of Title IX in American Intercollegiate sports has been one of incr...
Sports have been a male dominated field years, and women have not been acknowledged for their achiev...
Women hold less than 2% of NCAA men’s head coaching positions (Acosta & Carpenter, 2004). Although ...
With its long history as an exclusively male domain, competitive sports stands as a key site for exp...
The purpose of this phenomenological study is to explore and understand the experiences of female at...
Title IX\u27s three-part test for measuring discrimination in the provision of athletic opportunitie...
Participation in sport does not turn boys from blank slates into men with hard masculine identities....