Football, Community and Sustainability

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Ability Suite
Adriano Gmez-Bantel
Andy Pringle
Annabel Kiernan
Anthony May
Bergens Tidende
Carolina Brill
Category=SCB
Category=SFBC
Champions League
Chris Porter
Chuenchanok Nin Siriwat
Club Board
community empowerment
Daniel Parnell
David Treharne
Developing Evaluation Strategies
Disabled Fans
Disabled Supporters
economic sustainability
English Premier League
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Exeter City
financial fair play
football
football and community
football and health
Football Association
Health Improvement Programmes
Jackie Hargreaves
Jim McKenna
John Grady
Juan Luis Paramio-Salcines
Manchester United FC
Mick Totten
Non-match Days
Phil Downs
Professional Football Clubs
regional identity in sport
Research Ethics Clearance
Roy Krovel
Soccer & Society
Social sustainability
social sustainability research
South American Players
sport in the global society
sport sociology
Stephen Zwolinsky
Steve Menary
supporter ownership models
sustainable football club management
Trust Board
UEFA Competition
UEFA Member
UEFA's Decision
VfB Stuttgart
VIP Area
VIP Guest
Will Simpson
Young Men
Zoe Rutherford

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138083660
  • Weight: 412g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A lack of ‘sustainability thinking’ is evident at the heart of many of the problems that football faces today; from the huge amounts of money that clubs seem compelled to spend on what are often short-term gains – and the speculation, debt and market-centred ideology that goes with it – to the not unrelated deep disenchantment experienced by many football fans for a game that they still, despite it all, remain determined to love.

Sustainability here is more broadly conceptualised than focusing on environmental issues. It encompasses social and economic sustainability, albeit with a critical eye on the interdependent, often contradictory, relationship between what the United Nations regards as the three ‘pillars’ of sustainability (environmental, social and economic).

Fittingly, this book is the result of an international collaboration between an interdisciplinary network of academics and football industry practitioners, brought together by the Centre for the Study of Football and its Communities (CSFC), based at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. The critical insights collected here focus not just on football’s problems, but also how clubs, authorities, players and fans in a range of local contexts are positively tackling the challenges of surviving and thriving in the contemporary global game.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Sport & Society.

Chris Porter is based at the Centre for the Study of Football and its Communities, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. His research explores the links between football fans, class-consciousness, neoliberal ideology and globalisation. Anthony May is based at the School of Marketing and Management, Coventry University, UK. His research explores the relationship of sport with a range of social and political issues, including austerity, sustainability, political campaigning, as well as with other forms of culture. Annabel Kiernan is based at the Centre for the Study of Football and its Communities, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. Her research interests cover public sector reform and the role of football in local service delivery and community identity.