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Sport and physical activity across the lifespan: critical perspectives

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TLDR
In this paper, sport and physical activity across the life span is discussed, highlighting the intersections between different life stages and social, economic and cultural factors in the developed world, including class, gender, ability, family dynamics and race.
Abstract
This edited collection problematizes trajectories of health promotion across the lifespan. It provides a distinctive critical social science perspective of the various directions taken by dominant policies in their approach to promoting sport for all ages. It offers an array of theoretical and methodologically diverse perspectives on this topic, and highlights the intersections between different life stages and social, economic and cultural factors in the developed world, including class, gender, ability, family dynamics and/or race. Sport and Physical Activity across the Lifespan critically explores dominant policies of age-focussed sport promotion in order to highlight its implications within the context of particular life stages as they intersect with social, cultural and economic factors. This includes an examination of organised sport for pre-schoolers; ‘at-risk’ youth sport programmes; and the creation of sporting sub-cultures within the mid-life ‘market’. This book will be of interest to those wanting to learning more about how age and life stages affect the way people think about and participate in sport, and to better understand the impacts of sport across the lifespan.

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Journal ArticleDOI

"You Can Sit in the Middle or Be One of the Outliers": Older Male Athletes and the Complexities of Social Comparison.

TL;DR: The findings show that the useful psychological strategy of social comparison for maintaining a positive sense of self and performance may also have some negative individual and societal consequences.
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The world turned upside down: sport, policy and ageing

TL;DR: In the context of the twenty-first century's obesity epidemic, the rising risk of lifestyle diseases and ageing populations, some scholars suggest that competitive and vigorous sports may not be the right kind of physical activity for young people because, they argue, it is not something they will be able to keep doing in later life as discussed by the authors.
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Re)conceptualising physical activity participation as career

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the conventional approach to understand physical activity participation as a product of motivation does not allow for a deeper exploration of the wider structural, historical, and discursive contexts in which physical activities participation occurs.
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Psychosocial outcomes of sport participation for middle-aged and older adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that psychological and social benefits of sport participation for the ageing population can be found in a qualitative and quantitative synthesis of quantitative studies on this topic, but no quantitative synthesis has been conducted.
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The Relation of Physical Activity and Self-Rated Health in Older Age - Cross Country Analysis Results from SHARE

TL;DR: Individual and socio-structural resources are significant determinants regarding the relation of physical activity and self-rated health in older age and preventive care for the elderly should be focused more on creating structural and socioeconomic conditions.