2004
DOI: 10.1080/01490400490461396
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Organizational Barriers to Inclusion: Perspectives from the Recreation Professional

Abstract: Recreation professionals continually strive to serve a host of diverse program constituents, while leisure researchers attempt to uncover barriers to leisure participation. Much of the barriers or constraints research has come from the perspective of program participants. This study identified, from the perspectives and experiences of 18 recreation professionals, the issues and barriers that they perceive inhibit recreation program access and availability to diverse constituents, particularly ethnic minority p… Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…The sample consisted of 39 of these women, a 53% response rate. Our sample size while small was consistent with the sample sizes in other qualitative studies (e.g., [2,31]), and met accepted key features in qualitative research sampling criteria [20,51].…”
Section: Samplementioning
confidence: 66%
“…The sample consisted of 39 of these women, a 53% response rate. Our sample size while small was consistent with the sample sizes in other qualitative studies (e.g., [2,31]), and met accepted key features in qualitative research sampling criteria [20,51].…”
Section: Samplementioning
confidence: 66%
“…Our final sample consisted of 39 women (53%), which is consistent with sample sizes in other qualitative studies (e.g., Allison & Hibbler, 2004;Gershon, Gowen, Compian, & Hayward, 2004;Halliwell & Dittmar, 2003). Fifteen percent of the participants were supervisors who managed between 3 and 11 employees.…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…This illustrates that community sport and recreation can play a role in the settlement and social inclusion of immigrants. As population patterns continue to shift around the world, questions have been raised about the degree to which sport and recreation organizations are responding to this type of social change through local inclusion efforts (Adair, Taylor, & Darcy, 2010;Allison & Hibbler, 2004). Marcus et al (2006) reported that few physical activity intervention studies target ethnic or racial minority groups, and few have adopted an integrated approach where physical activity is connected to other aspects of people's wellbeing like nutrition and mental health that could broaden the impact of community-level interventions (Keleher & Armstrong, 2005).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%