“We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration

The last years many people have been forcibly displaced due to circumstances such as conflicts in the world, and many people have come to Sweden for shelter. It has been challenging for Swedish society to receive and guide newcomers through the resettlement process, and many organizations in civil s...

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Autores principales: Hertting Krister, Karlefors Inger
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Sciendo 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/4540565ae0f8413cb36943e7b0c1b704
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:4540565ae0f8413cb36943e7b0c1b7042021-12-05T14:11:09Z“We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration1899-484910.2478/pcssr-2021-0023https://doaj.org/article/4540565ae0f8413cb36943e7b0c1b7042021-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.2478/pcssr-2021-0023https://doaj.org/toc/1899-4849The last years many people have been forcibly displaced due to circumstances such as conflicts in the world, and many people have come to Sweden for shelter. It has been challenging for Swedish society to receive and guide newcomers through the resettlement process, and many organizations in civil society, such as sports clubs, have been invited to support the resettlement. However, a limited numbers of studies has drawn the attention to sports clubs experiences. Therefore the aim of the paper was enhance understanding of sports clubs’ prerequesites and experiences of integration efforts with immigrant children and youth. Ten Swedish clubs with experience of working with newcomers participated. Semi-structured interviews were conducted, and analyzed with qualitative content analysis. Two categories were identified: Struggling with sporting values and organization and Seeing integration in everyday activities. The clubs experienced that integration occurs in everyday activities, but current ideas focusing competition and rigid organization of sports constrained possibilities for integrating newcomers with no or limited former experience of club sports. The clubs experienced potential to contribute to personal development, social connectedness and enjoyment in a new society and building bridges between cultures. In conclusion, clubs cannot solve the challenges of resettlement in society but have potential to be part of larger societal networks of integration.Hertting KristerKarlefors IngerSciendoarticleintegrationyouth sportsqualitative methodsmigrationnewcomersSportsGV557-1198.995ENPhysical Culture and Sport: Studies and Research, Vol 92, Iss 1, Pp 32-42 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic integration
youth sports
qualitative methods
migration
newcomers
Sports
GV557-1198.995
spellingShingle integration
youth sports
qualitative methods
migration
newcomers
Sports
GV557-1198.995
Hertting Krister
Karlefors Inger
“We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
description The last years many people have been forcibly displaced due to circumstances such as conflicts in the world, and many people have come to Sweden for shelter. It has been challenging for Swedish society to receive and guide newcomers through the resettlement process, and many organizations in civil society, such as sports clubs, have been invited to support the resettlement. However, a limited numbers of studies has drawn the attention to sports clubs experiences. Therefore the aim of the paper was enhance understanding of sports clubs’ prerequesites and experiences of integration efforts with immigrant children and youth. Ten Swedish clubs with experience of working with newcomers participated. Semi-structured interviews were conducted, and analyzed with qualitative content analysis. Two categories were identified: Struggling with sporting values and organization and Seeing integration in everyday activities. The clubs experienced that integration occurs in everyday activities, but current ideas focusing competition and rigid organization of sports constrained possibilities for integrating newcomers with no or limited former experience of club sports. The clubs experienced potential to contribute to personal development, social connectedness and enjoyment in a new society and building bridges between cultures. In conclusion, clubs cannot solve the challenges of resettlement in society but have potential to be part of larger societal networks of integration.
format article
author Hertting Krister
Karlefors Inger
author_facet Hertting Krister
Karlefors Inger
author_sort Hertting Krister
title “We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
title_short “We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
title_full “We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
title_fullStr “We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
title_full_unstemmed “We Can’t Get Stuck in Old Ways”: Swedish Sports Club’s Integration Efforts With Children and Youth in Migration
title_sort “we can’t get stuck in old ways”: swedish sports club’s integration efforts with children and youth in migration
publisher Sciendo
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/4540565ae0f8413cb36943e7b0c1b704
work_keys_str_mv AT herttingkrister wecantgetstuckinoldwaysswedishsportsclubsintegrationeffortswithchildrenandyouthinmigration
AT karleforsinger wecantgetstuckinoldwaysswedishsportsclubsintegrationeffortswithchildrenandyouthinmigration
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