SHORE & Whāriki Research Centre, Massey University, New Zealand.
SHORE & Whāriki Research Centre, Massey University, New Zealand.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 Nov;288:113213. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113213. Epub 2020 Jul 31.
Disabled young people have lower levels of participation in community life than nondisabled peers across a number of domains, including sporting activities, with profound implications for health, wellbeing and life course opportunities. Playing sport is a defining feature of identity for many young people in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Participation in sporting activities provides opportunities to develop competencies, to have fun and to compete, while also providing a sense of inclusion and peer group belonging. However, despite policies promoting inclusion of disabled young people in school and club sport, ableist attitudes and practices still function to exclude individuals who do not fit able-bodied norms. Drawing on recent 'assemblage thinking' in health and cultural geography, this paper explores the material, social and affective dimensions of 'enabling' and 'disabling' sporting assemblages, drawing on interviews with 35 disabled young people (12-25 years), parents and key informants. Many reported instances of demoralising exclusion in mainstream sporting activities. Some turned to adaptive sporting codes, designed for inclusion. In our exploration of participants' embodied experiences of enabling and disabling assemblages we employ assemblage theory to examine how social, affective and material forces and processes converge to either enable or constrain participation in local sporting activities. We close with a brief assessment of the implications of our analysis for ongoing efforts to promote inclusion for disabled youth in physical activity.
残疾年轻人在参与社区生活方面的程度低于非残疾同龄人,在包括体育活动在内的多个领域,这对健康、幸福感和人生机会都有深远的影响。在新西兰,体育运动是许多年轻人身份的重要特征。参与体育活动提供了发展能力、获得乐趣和竞争的机会,同时也提供了一种包容感和同龄人群体归属感。然而,尽管有政策推动残疾年轻人在学校和俱乐部体育中的参与,但对残疾的歧视态度和做法仍然存在,将不符合健全人规范的人排除在外。本文借鉴了健康和文化地理学领域最近的“集合思维”,探讨了“使能”和“去能”体育集合的物质、社会和情感维度,采访了 35 名残疾年轻人(12-25 岁)、家长和主要知情人。许多人报告了在主流体育活动中令人沮丧的排斥事件。一些人转而参加专为包容而设计的适应性运动项目。在我们对参与者的体验进行探索时,我们运用集合理论来考察社会、情感和物质力量和过程如何汇聚在一起,使或限制他们参与当地体育活动。最后,我们简要评估了我们的分析对持续努力促进残疾青年参与体育活动的包容性的影响。