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Towards a social justice disposition in communication and sport scholarship

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-09, 15:05 authored by Daniel Jackson, Filippo Trevisan, Emma PullenEmma Pullen, Michael Silk
In this introduction to a special issue on sport communication and social justice, we offer some reflections on the state of the discipline as it relates to social justice. We bring attention to the role of sport communication scholars in the advancement of social justice goals and articulate a set of dispositions for researchers to bring to their practice, predicated on internalizing and centralizing morality, ethics, and the political. Identifying the epistemological (under)currents in the meaningful study of communication and sport, we offer a set of challenges for researchers in the contemporary critique of the communication industries based on “sensibilities” or dispositions of the research to those studied. We then introduce and frame the 13 articles that make up this double special issue of Communication & Sport. Collectively, these articles begin to demonstrate such dispositions in their interrogation of some of the most important and spectacularized acts of social justice campaigns and activism in recent decades alongside investigations of everyday forms of marginalization, resistance, and collective action that underpin social change—both progressive and regressive. We hope this special issue provides a vehicle for continued work in the area of sports communication and social justice.

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

Communication & Sport

Volume

8

Issue

4-5

Pages

435 - 451

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Communication & Sport and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1177/2167479520932929. Users who receive access to an article through a repository are reminded that the article is protected by copyright and reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses. Users may also download and save a local copy of an article accessed in an institutional repository for the user's personal reference.

Acceptance date

2020-05-16

Publication date

2020-07-06

Copyright date

2020

ISSN

2167-4795

eISSN

2167-4809

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Emma Pullen. Deposit date: 8 July 2020

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