4.4 Article

'Stop mocking, start respecting': an activist approach meets African Australian refugee-background young women in grassroots football

Journal

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN SPORT EXERCISE AND HEALTH
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 119-136

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/2159676X.2021.1879920

Keywords

Sport coaching; forced migrant; football; activist approach; sport for development; youth development; participatory action research

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This study explored the process of co-creating a sports program with young refugee women using an activist approach. The researchers and participants learned the importance of collaboration in sports programs and identified the lack of female representation as a main concern.
If designed well, sport-based programmes may facilitate increased wellbeing, inclusion and feelings of belonging for refugee-background young people. An activist approach is a pedagogical way to co-create programmes with young people in order to better address their needs and aspirations. The aim of this study was to explore the process of co-creating a sport programme with refugee-background young women and what they, and the researcher, learned throughout this process. The project comprised a six-month participatory action research in a football programme in Australia. Participants included the first author and 13 African Australian refugee-background young women (including the second author). Data collection comprised: (a) observations; (b) collaborative meetings; (c) photovoice; and (d) generated artefacts. Data analysis involved both inductive and deductive processes drawing on critical pedagogy and feminist studies. The first eight weeks were designed with the intent of identifying what facilitated and hindered the young women's engagement in sport. We identified the lack of female representation in the sport programme as their main concern. Given what we learned from them, we co-created and implemented a coaches' workshop where the young women shared the data collected and brainstormed spaces for future change. The young women reported that they learned that 'together we have power', and the importance of 'speaking up to those in charge'. We suggest that an activist approach can bring a much-needed strengths-based model to sport programmes and interventions with refugee-background young people, particularly young women who have historically been silenced and sidelined in sport-based interventions.

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