Sporting spaces draw together distinct social assortments. Football (in various forms), for example, generates specific types of spectators and spectator behaviours. Cognizant of this work, our paper examines the 2010 World Blind Football Championships (WBFC) and its spectatorship. We conducted semi-structured interviews, orientated around perceptions of disability/disability sport, with 285 spectators. The thrust of our paper is that the event affords spectators opportunities to better understand, appreciate and engage with the experiences of athletes with a disability. We argue that the unique context of blind football competitions (characterized here as an unthreatening, convivial, often familial-like,\ud and somewhat parochial space) re...
Marginalized groups, such as those experiencing homelessness, are largely excluded from participatio...
Developments within disability football in recent years have influenced football opportunities for p...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Managing Sport and Lei...
Sporting spaces draw together distinct social assortments. Football (in various forms), for example,...
Football rhetoric in recent years has emphasised the notion of the ‘football family’ as an inclusive...
Football rhetoric in recent years has emphasised the notion of the ‘football family’ as an inclusive...
This article examines restrictions of activity experienced by partially sighted individuals when acc...
The purpose of this study was to increase the understanding of how athletes with disabilities experi...
This article explores the auditory experiences of a group of visually impaired elite sportsmen and h...
Previous research has shown that football fandom for people with a learning disability can positivel...
Can sport provide a platform for disability awareness as regards both social and biological dimensio...
A key feature of government policy in the last 30 years is the use of sport programmes as a vehicle ...
Australian policy makers and funding organisations have relied heavily on sport as a vehicle for ach...
This article discusses the social support of totally blind football players. A range of issues relat...
Established in 2012, ‘the Seekers’ are a football club in Melbourne, Australia. Initially set up to ...
Marginalized groups, such as those experiencing homelessness, are largely excluded from participatio...
Developments within disability football in recent years have influenced football opportunities for p...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Managing Sport and Lei...
Sporting spaces draw together distinct social assortments. Football (in various forms), for example,...
Football rhetoric in recent years has emphasised the notion of the ‘football family’ as an inclusive...
Football rhetoric in recent years has emphasised the notion of the ‘football family’ as an inclusive...
This article examines restrictions of activity experienced by partially sighted individuals when acc...
The purpose of this study was to increase the understanding of how athletes with disabilities experi...
This article explores the auditory experiences of a group of visually impaired elite sportsmen and h...
Previous research has shown that football fandom for people with a learning disability can positivel...
Can sport provide a platform for disability awareness as regards both social and biological dimensio...
A key feature of government policy in the last 30 years is the use of sport programmes as a vehicle ...
Australian policy makers and funding organisations have relied heavily on sport as a vehicle for ach...
This article discusses the social support of totally blind football players. A range of issues relat...
Established in 2012, ‘the Seekers’ are a football club in Melbourne, Australia. Initially set up to ...
Marginalized groups, such as those experiencing homelessness, are largely excluded from participatio...
Developments within disability football in recent years have influenced football opportunities for p...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Managing Sport and Lei...