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Women in Intercollegiate Sport: A Longitudinal, National Study. Thirty Three Year Update, 1977-2010.

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The article was published on 2010-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 217 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: College athletics & Trend analysis.

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Bargaining with patriarchy: former female coaches' experiences and their decision to leave collegiate coaching.

TL;DR: The survey findings, which included 121 former female coaches, suggest that time and family commitments were the main reasons they left coaching, and the interview findings confirmed the open-ended responses on the survey.
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Underrepresentation of women in sport leadership: : A review of research

TL;DR: This article provided a multilevel examination of available scholarship that contributes to understanding why there are so few women in leadership positions within sport, including stereotyping of leaders, issues of discrimination, and gendered organizational cultures.
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Women Play Sport, But Not on TV A Longitudinal Study of Televised News Media

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine 6 weeks of the televised news media coverage on the local news affiliates in Los Angeles (KABC, KNBC, and KCBS) and on a nationally broadcast sports news and highlight show, ESPN's SportsCenter.
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Female athletes, women's sport, and the sport media commercial complex: Have we really “come a long way, baby”?

TL;DR: The 2012 London Olympic Games were heralded as the “Year of the Woman” as every delegation sent a female athlete to compete in the games, and nearly 45% of all athletes were women as discussed by the authors.
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Work-Family Conflict in Coaching I: A Top-Down Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used online focus groups for data collection from 41 National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I female head coaches with children to examine the factors that impacted work-family conflict from a top-down perspective.