Over the course of the last 125 years the sport of Gaelic football in Ireland has undergone a sportization and civilizing process as the rules governing the sport became stricter and players developed greater levels of self-control. However, the civilizing of Gaelic football was a particularly fragile and uneven process. The growing social desire to diminish displays of violence was moderated by ambivalence towards violence. Gradually the external social controls on players increased and, greater and more stable levels of internalization occurred reflected by more advanced levels of player self-restraint in the control of violence. At the same time the threshold of shame toward displays of violence advanced. This transformation was shaped b...
The purpose of the thesis is to ascertain the reasons for the split in Irish soccer. Chronologically...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
Research into the physical demands of Gaelic football is limited with no research into the agility o...
This essay examines the sport of hurling in Ireland through the theoretical framework of sport and l...
This paper examines the development of different forms of spectator violence in terms of the socio-t...
This thesis is a study of the role that sport played in a changing Irish society during the tumultu...
The development of sport in Donegal, a peripheral Irish county which was rather isolated from the mo...
In this paper we explain how and why a specific ethos of amateurism was portrayed and embodied by va...
Social developments and related dynamic relationships connected with the sports– media complex is a ...
The rise of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) in late 19th-century Ireland offers significant di...
Tactical Periodisation is a training methodology, originally developed for soccer, that focuses prim...
This is the first integrated study of rugby and association football in Ireland on an all-island bas...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) as an organisation grew from an idealised political ideology ...
This article discusses the methodological implications of using a figurational approach to the study...
This thesis examines the development of sport in county Westmeath between 1850 and 1905. The subjec...
The purpose of the thesis is to ascertain the reasons for the split in Irish soccer. Chronologically...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
Research into the physical demands of Gaelic football is limited with no research into the agility o...
This essay examines the sport of hurling in Ireland through the theoretical framework of sport and l...
This paper examines the development of different forms of spectator violence in terms of the socio-t...
This thesis is a study of the role that sport played in a changing Irish society during the tumultu...
The development of sport in Donegal, a peripheral Irish county which was rather isolated from the mo...
In this paper we explain how and why a specific ethos of amateurism was portrayed and embodied by va...
Social developments and related dynamic relationships connected with the sports– media complex is a ...
The rise of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) in late 19th-century Ireland offers significant di...
Tactical Periodisation is a training methodology, originally developed for soccer, that focuses prim...
This is the first integrated study of rugby and association football in Ireland on an all-island bas...
The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) as an organisation grew from an idealised political ideology ...
This article discusses the methodological implications of using a figurational approach to the study...
This thesis examines the development of sport in county Westmeath between 1850 and 1905. The subjec...
The purpose of the thesis is to ascertain the reasons for the split in Irish soccer. Chronologically...
Formed in 1873 and 1887 respectively, the histories of Scottish football titans Glasgow Rangers and ...
Research into the physical demands of Gaelic football is limited with no research into the agility o...