2013
DOI: 10.1080/17430437.2012.753528
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Are there still social barriers to women's rugby?

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Cited by 26 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…As Mennesson (2000: 31) showed with regard to boxing, 'the entry of women into the world of boxing depends on (…) the inculcation of a competitive sporting ethos during the primary stage of socialization'. But, as we had already found in research on French women playing rugby in the first division (Joncheray and Tlili, 2013), our sample did not fully confirm Mennesson's second necessary but insufficient condition, i.e. 'involvement in traditionally masculine games and sports during childhood' (Mennesson, 2000: 31).…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 75%
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“…As Mennesson (2000: 31) showed with regard to boxing, 'the entry of women into the world of boxing depends on (…) the inculcation of a competitive sporting ethos during the primary stage of socialization'. But, as we had already found in research on French women playing rugby in the first division (Joncheray and Tlili, 2013), our sample did not fully confirm Mennesson's second necessary but insufficient condition, i.e. 'involvement in traditionally masculine games and sports during childhood' (Mennesson, 2000: 31).…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 75%
“…I fidgeted too much, I couldn't stand still' (interview 9) -and unsuccessfully -'I was out of sync with the others, I bowed to the audience when nobody had yet (laughs), I did not follow the same pace' (interview 4). As with French first-division female players (Joncheray and Tlili, 2013), we come to conclusions that differ from those of Louveau and Davisse (1998: 119), who wrote that for women to succeed in a 'masculine' sports activity, they should learn beforehand how to simulate behaviours through activities like dancing.…”
Section: The Players' Sport Socializationmentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…Ainsi, alors que les enfants de notre échantillon prennent, en moyenne, leur première licence rugbystique à 7,6 ans -ce qui correspond aussi à l'âge moyen auquel les garçons sont inscrits au rugby -, les filles le font un peu plus d'un an après soit à 8,8 ans. Ce résultat peut être associé à la présence de freins sociaux toujours présents quant à la pratique par des filles et/ou des femmes d'un sport étiqueté masculin (Joncheray et al, 2016 ;Joncheray, Laporte, Tenèze, 2015 ;Joncheray et Tlili, 2013 ;Mennesson, 2005).…”
Section: Filles Et Garçons : Des Différences Accentuées Dans L'âge D'accès à La Pratique Du Rugbyunclassified
“…This range of emotional responses is no doubt related to issues of interactional justice and legitimacy related to the continual struggle of women's teams/leagues to obtain: adequate spectator attendance; media coverage and sponsorship (Allison, 2017;Fink, 2015); equal/equitable remuneration and treatment (Andersen and Loland, 2017;Hendrick, 2017); job security/ playing contracts (Willson et. al., 2017); and community concerns about women's physical capability and the risk of injury when women compete at a professional level 2 (Joncheray and Tlili, 2013). The sustainability of women's professional team sport has been questioned in light of the failure of many new leagues (Allison, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%