1st Edition
Social Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Sport for Development and Peace
This book examines the ways in which sport for development and peace (SDP) offers an opportunity for entrepreneurship to take place through and within sport, and how innovation in the context of SDP contributes to social and economic value for underrepresented and marginalised groups and individuals.
Written by a team of leading international SDP researchers, and featuring the voices of active SDP practitioners, the book examines the ways in which entrepreneurs seek to use sport and/or social innovation in and through sport to achieve their goals of social and economic development. It explores the strategies that SDP organizations and practitioners are utilizing in the current neoliberal moment to not only survive during economic hardship - particularly during the COVID 19 crisis - but also to thrive, drawing on important concepts such as innovation, risk taking, proactiveness and opportunity seeking. It also considers how nongovernmental organizations, companies, governments, and communities are working to tackle development issues in SDP using non-traditional forms of organization and management, such as social enterprise models.
Combining cutting-edge research with reflections on best practice in the field, this book is important reading for any advanced student, researcher or practitioner with an interest in the sociology of sport, sport for development, sport management, development studies, social enterprise or innovation.
Part I: Theories and Histories of Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Sport for Development and Peace
1 Introduction: Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Sport for Development and Peace
Mitchell McSweeney, Per G. Svensson and Lyndsay M.C. Hayhurst
2 Social Entrepreneurship and Sport for Development and Peace
Fredrik O. Andersson, Per G. Svensson and Lewis Faulk
3 Decolonizing Sport for Development, Social Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship
Dan Henhawk
4 Institutional Entrepreneurship in Sport for Development and Peace
Per G. Svensson, Meredith Whitley and Mitchell McSweeney
5 Generating Human-Centered Social Innovation in Sport-for-Development with Design Thinking
Greg Joachim, Nico Schulenkorf and Katie Schlenker
Part II: Examples from the Sport for Development and Peace Ground
6 The Role of the Playlab in the Creation of Open-Source Solutions: PLAY International
David Blough
7 A Social Enterprise Football Club: Kick4Life
Steve Fleming
8 Championing Innovation in Sport for Development and Peace: Women Win, Naz, and Moving the Goalposts
Sarah Forde, Maria Bobenrieth and Kalyani Subramanyam
9 Rethinking Community Activation: Waves for Change
Matt Mattila and Joseph Piaker
10 Responding to Environmental Challenges in Kenya through Social Entrepreneurship: Sadili Sports Academy
Elizabeth Okong’o Odera
Part III: The Possibilities and Constraints of Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Sport for Development and Peace
11 Hybrid Organizational Forms in Sport for Development and Peace
Per G. Svensson and Katherine Raw
12 Intraorganizational Factors Associated with Enabling and Sustaining Social Entrepreneurship and Social Innovation in Sport for Development and Peace
Gareth J. Jones, Christine Wegner, Zeno Nols and Anne Tjønndal
13 Exploring the Social and Political Tensions of Entrepreneurship in Vietnamese Sport for Development
Michael Dao and Simon Darnell
14 Refugees, Social Entrepreneurship, and Sport for Development and Peace
Mitchell McSweeney and Patrick Hakiza
Part IV: Future Directions? Musings on What Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship Could Look Like in Post-Pandemic Sport for Development and Peace
15 Sport for Development and Peace Funding in a Post-Pandemic World
Solveig Straume
16 Innovative Approaches to Menstrual Health and Sport for Development: Menstrual Matters
Sarah Zipp, Sasha Sutherland and Lilamani de Soysa
17 Esport in the Sport for Development and Peace Sector: Innovation and Spheres of Change
Holly Collison-Randall, Emily Jane Hayday and Richard Loat
18 Repositioning Sport as an Innovation within National Policy
Justin Richards, Alex Hamilton and Hamish McEwen
19 Concluding Thoughts: Opportunities and Tensions of Social Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Sport for Development and Peace
Mitchell McSweeney, Per G. Svensson and Lyndsay M.C. Hayhurst
Biography
Mitchell McSweeney is Assistant Professor of Sport Management in Innovation and Entrepreneurship at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, USA. His research focuses on social entrepreneurship, innovation, sport for development and peace (SDP), and livelihoods, and he often utilizes postcolonial theory, institutional theory, and diaspora to critically investigate these areas. He has worked with various SDP organizations in Uganda, Canada, India, Eswatini, and a number of international organizations.
Per G. Svensson is Associate Professor in Sport Management within the School of Kinesiology at Louisiana State University, USA. His research examines organizational capacity and innovation in Sport for Development and Peace and explores the challenges of operating community-based SDP organizations within broader social, political, historical, and economic contexts. Dr. Svensson is also a Research Fellow with the North American Society for Sport Management and Co-Editor for the Journal of Sport for Development.
Lyndsay M.C. Hayhurst is a York Research Chair (Tier 2) in Sport, Gender & Development and Digital Participatory Research, and Assistant Professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Science at York University, Canada. Her research focuses on gender issues in/through sport for development and peace (SDP), gender-based violence prevention and sexual and reproductive health rights promotion, bicycle justice, gender and mobility studies, cultural studies of ‘girlhood’, postcolonial and decolonial feminist theory, global governance, international relations and corporate social responsibility.
Parissa Safai is Professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Science in the Faculty of Health at York University, Canada. Her research interests focus on the critical study of sport at the intersection of risk, health and healthcare. This includes research on sports’ “culture of risk”, the development and social organization of sport and exercise medicine, as well as the social determinants of athletes’ health. Her research and teaching interests also centre on sport and social inequality with a focus on the impact of gender, socio-economic, and ethnocultural inequities on accessible physical activity for all. She is also Special Advisor to the President for Academic Continuity Planning and COVID-19 Response, as well as General Secretary to the International Sociology of Sport Association (ISSA).
'Curated by world-leading experts, Social Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Sport for Development and Peace, provides an invaluable and cutting-edge resource for scholars and practitioners globally.'
Professor Emma Sherry, Director, Sport Innovation Research Group, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
'In the midst of a global pandemic, Social Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Sport for Development and Peace provides a timely and novel exploration of the tensions, opportunities, and synergies in this landscape. Its intersection of theory with applied case studies will be of immense benefit to scholars and practitioners alike. I highly recommend it!'
Jon Welty Peachey, Ph.D., University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA