organizational implications of a declaration for human rights in sports

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Organizational Implications of a Declaration of Human Rights in Sport Per Svensson Kwame Agyemang Louisiana State University 2016 Ali Athletes and Social Change Forum

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Page 1: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Organizational Implications of a Declaration of

Human Rights in Sport

Per SvenssonKwame Agyemang

Louisiana State University

2016 Ali Athletes and Social Change Forum

Page 2: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Introduction Sport associated with

promotion and deprivation of human rights (Donnelly, 2008)

Declaration of Human Rights in Sport Sound in Theory, but what

about in Practice?

Organizational Perspective can inform development and implementation of a more meaningful policy document

Page 3: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Levels of Threats to Athletes

Athlete

Individual

Relational

Organizational

Source: Mountjoy et al., 2015

Page 4: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Themes of Human Rights• Participation, Association, Expression, OrganizingFreedom

• From Violence and DiscriminationProtection• Due Process and Inclusive Access to Facilities + OpportunitiesAccess

• Solidarity and Distributive JusticeEquality• Opportunities for physical, psychological, and social wellbeingAbility

Source: Adams & Piekarz, 2015; UN, n.d.

Page 5: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

What do we know about implementations of formalized

rights in sport?

Page 6: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

The Curious Case of the Swedish Sport System

Page 7: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

The Structure of Swedish Sport

Source: Riksidrottsförbundet, 2012

Page 8: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Swedish Sport Policy In 2009, a children’s rights perspective

was included in Swedish Sport Policy based on the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child

Eliasson (2015) explored the lived realities of actors at the grassroots level during 2011 and 2012.

Page 9: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Formalized vs. Actual Rights and Realities Neither children or coaches in Swedish sport clubs

were aware of SSC’s incorporation of Children’s Rights in Swedish sport policy

Findings also indicated lack of knowledge of the UNCRC

Interviewees did not find policy document meaningful since they had not experienced any deliberate work regarding children’s rights in their respective sport clubs

Source: Eliasson, 2015

Page 10: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Sport Clubs as Policy Implementers? Dangerous to assume sport clubs are

“ready, willing, and able” to act as policy implementers (p. 2).

Empirical findings indicate considerable differences depending on the identity of an organization Heterogeneity creates challenge in terms

of policy-practice alignmentSource: Stenling and Fahlén, 2014

Page 11: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Lessons Learned from Child Protection in Sport Efforts?

Page 12: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Child Protection in Sport Efforts Lack of awareness and knowledge ->

uneducated assumptions among many grassroots leaders

Access to information perceived as complex and too difficult for sport club personnel

Unwillingness to challenge assumptions point to need (yet difficulty) for cultural change within sport community

Source: Brackenridge, 2002

Page 13: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Child Protection in Sport Efforts Need for vertical and horizontal policy alignment

across sport governing bodies

Cascade training system could provide a valuable implementation strategy

Considerable need for training and guidance for more efficient management

Policy should be based on empirical research rather than in reactive response to demands for action

Source: Brackenridge, 2002; Fransson, 2009; Rhind et al., 2015

Page 14: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Additional Sport Policy Considerations Volunteers may interpret and adapt policies through

the lens of local perspectives (Skille, 2008)

Important to avoid policy assumptions of fixed realities and instead embrace the flexibility of the real world (Donaldson, Legget, & Finch, 2011; Kokko, Kannas, & Villberg, 2009; Nichols & James, 2008)

Similar examples found in Sport-for-Development with discrepancies between policy discourses and local practices (e.g., Hasselgård & Straume, 2015)

Page 15: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Voices from the Field Grassroots leaders have expressed the need for volunteer-

driven nature of sport to be incorporated in sport policy (Donalson et al., 2011)

Considerable ambiguity in operationalization of youth sport harassment policies (Donnelly, Kerr, Heron, & DiCarlo, 2016)

Specific policy recommendations include: Flexibility for overcoming contextual challenges Simplify and define terminology Provide details on mechanisms for supporting implementation Consider incremental implementation process

Page 16: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

What about the ‘universality’ of human rights?

Foreseeable concerns among sport organizations in different across different contexts

Page 17: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Universality of Human Rights

Does a declaration of human rights imply or reinforce Western ideals? Concerns raised by several post-colonialist theorists

regarding Human Rights Declarations

Yet, the Universal Declaration must remain the foundation of any Human Rights discussion (Giulianotti, 2004)

Others argue for ‘relative’ universality of human rights allowing for regional and cultural diversity (Donnelly, 2007)

Page 18: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Universality of Human Rights

Achieving universal acceptance of norms is a process

Acceptance must come from within a given region for sustainability

This does not mean the creation of regional human rights

Instead, the use of regional supervision of compliance with the international standards

Source: Cerna, 1994

Page 19: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

What is required for successful implementation of a Declaration

of Human Rights in Sport?

Page 20: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Pillars of Successful Implementation

• Domestically and InternationallyCultural Sensitivity• Co-ordination across Sport Eco-SystemHolistic• Provide value for volunteer

leaders/orgs.Incentives• Clear and coherent coordinationLeadership• Openness to local realitiesDynamic• Specify what will be providedResources• Inclusive and active decision-makingEngaging

Stakeholders• Allow for collective impactNetworks

Source: International Safeguarding Children in Sport Working Group, 2011; Mountjoy et al., 2015

Page 21: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Youth Perspectives Lessons learned from Youth at the UN

Conference on ‘Reaffirming Human Rights for All’: Imperative to make human rights

relatable through personalized stories Education is crucial, yet many states do

not want people to learn about their rights NGOs serve important roles to overcome

this barrier in local communities

Source: Kuriansky, 2009

Page 22: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Athlete-Centered Approach? Most sport organizations are driven by

member participants so why not utilize this resource?

An athlete-centered approach would require stakeholders to ask themselves, what a given action be in the best interest of the rights of the athlete? Participants’ rights would guide nature and

delivery of sport programsSource: Fransson, 2009

Page 23: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Moving Forward

Human Rights

in Sport

Normalize what human rights

norms are desirable in sport

Analyze actual situation and

develop appropriate strategies needed for

change

Source: Martelaer, Knop, Theebom, & Heddegem, 2000

Page 24: Organizational Implications of a Declaration for Human Rights in Sports

Continuing the Conversation