Economics of Gender and Sport

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A01=Vani Kant Borooah
access inequality
access inequality in sport
Author_Vani Kant Borooah
Batter's Scores
Batter’s Scores
Batting Average
Batting Performance
Bbl
Bowling Averages
Category=JBSF
Category=KCC
Category=KCD
Category=KCH
Category=SFD
Competitive Balance
competitive balance in contests
competitive balance theory
cricket remunerations
cricket statistics analysis
Dark Grey Ball
distribution of luck
Disutility Function
DRS
EDE Score
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
Equal Prize Money
female cricketers
gender inequality research
gender studies
Grand Slam Tournaments
ICC
Independent School
inequality
inequality in performance
IPL
Melbourne Stars
player performance
player performance metrics
quality of umpiring
quantitative study of women's cricket
sports economics
Strike Rate
T20 World Cup
Tamil Nadu
Test Match
Umpire Error
Umpire's Call
Umpire’s Call
Winner's Curse
Winner’s Curse
women's cricket

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032109589
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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While women’s cricket, and women’s sport in general, has gained enormously in popularity in terms of both spectators and TV audiences, comparatively little is known about it and its participants, and there are few, if any, quantitative assessments of the game. The Economics of Gender and Sport: A Quantitative Analysis of Women’s Cricket fills that gap.

The work analyses the different forms of cricket - Test cricket, One-day, T20 – and is based on the latest sets of available data. It seeks to answer questions such as how well female cricketers play, how well they are paid, who the superstars are, and how competitive women’s cricket is. It also examines more general issues which affect men’s cricket too, with the over-arching theme of this book being inequality. First, the chapters discuss inequality in the distribution of luck. The book discusses the importance of luck in cricket and suggests a way of distinguishing between luck and ability in determining match outcomes. Second there is access inequality, which means that players from certain groups have an advantage in terms of being chosen to play in representative teams. Third, there is inequality in tournament outcomes, and this carries implications for the degree of competitive balance in contests between teams. Fourth is the issue of inequality in the quality of umpiring in men’s and women’s cricket. Fifth, there is inequality between men and women in their respective remunerations as cricketeers. Lastly, there is inequality in performance between players: the book explains how batting and bowling averages can be adjusted to better reflect player performance.

The volume will find an audience among advanced students and researchers in sports economics, sports-related and gender studies. More generally, it will appeal to lovers of cricket who wish to read about the game in terms which are more than simply anecdotal.

Vani Kant Borooah is Emeritus Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Ulster, UK.

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