“…Most of the scholarly work and conversation to this point regarding sport and social change has taken place outside of the intercollegiate context, framed within the SDP movement. In this vein, numerous studies have begun to examine the efficacy and impact of sport-based interventions on achieving a variety of outcomes, such as building social capital among marginalized groups (Burnett, 2006;Skinner, Zakus, & Cowell, 2008), facilitating social inclusion among the disenfranchised and marginalized (Sherry, 2010;Sherry & Strybosch, 2012;Welty Peachey, Lyras, Borland, & Cohen, 2013), and contributing to cross-cultural understanding and peace building efforts (Schulenkorf, Thomson, & Schlenker, 2011;Sugden, 2008;Welty Peachey, Cunningham, Lyras, Cohen, & Bruening, 2014). Another stream of literature has engaged with discourses and implications of neo-liberal and neocolonial agendas of SDP (Darnell, 2010;Darnell & Hayhurst, 2011;Kidd, 2011;Levermore, 2008), while other scholars have begun to build theory around effective SDP program design (Coalter, 2013;Lyras & Welty Peachey, 2011;Schulenkorf, 2012).…”