Sport for Reconciliation? Federal Sport Policy in Settler-Colonial States
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Date
2024-05-30
Open Access Location
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Western Ontario
Rights
(c) 2024 The Author/s
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Abstract
In settler-colonial contexts, the use of sport for reconciliation (SFR) has received increasing attention from national governments and their sporting agencies, though researchers have yet to track the development of SFR across settler colonial contexts. In this study, we examined how government sport policies in Australia, Canada, and Aotearoa New Zealand frame understandings of reconciliation. Through the application of both policy and frame analysis to 82 documents from 1970s to 2020, we argue that policy framings have shifted from presenting Indigenous peoples as a homogenous disadvantaged group to more inclusive considerations of Indigenous cultures. Nevertheless, an assimilative agenda continues to guide policy, as understandings of Indigenous self-determination are absent from sport policy documents and reconciliation is primarily understood as Indigenous peoples being reconciled to the status quo.
Description
Keywords
Sport, Policy, Reconciliation, Settler-colonialism
Citation
Forde S, Giles AR, Stewart-Withers R, Rynne S, Hapeta J, Hayhurst L, Henhawk D. (2024). Sport for Reconciliation? Federal Sport Policy in Settler-Colonial States. International Indigenous Policy Journal. 15. 1. (pp. 1-31).