“…Adams, 2011; Fahlén and Karp, 2010; May et al, 2013; Nichols et al, 2012; O’Gorman, 2011; Skille, 2009; Stenling, 2013). As sport and other voluntary organisations are increasingly being included in policies for welfare provision in a variety of national contexts and depicted as important resources in solving various social problems, many scholars have directed attention to interventions, programmes, projects, and activities targeting a wide range of social objectives such as public health (Thing and Ottesen, 2010), equal opportunity (Wickman, 2011), ethnic integration (Theeboom et al, 2012), social integration (Haudenhuyse et al, 2014), urban regeneration (Coaffee, 2008), democracy (Morgan, 2013), criminality (Mutz and Baur, 2009), youth delinquency (Stenling, 2014), peace (Hasselgård and Straume, 2015), national identity (Grix and Carmichael, 2012), and individual identity (Thorpe, 2014). Taken together, these studies and others have shown how policy implementation in general is contingent on a variety of properties associated with the bodies responsible for issuing the policy in question (Piggin et al, 2009), the cultural raw material of the policy (Stenling and Fahlén, 2014), the implementation process (O’Gorman, 2011), and the organisations expected to implement it (Reid, 2012).…”