Publication Date
1-1-2021
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Sport for Development
Volume
9
Issue
1
First Page
32
Last Page
47
Abstract
This study expands the Sport for Development and Peace (SDP) research focusing on the impact of national values and ideas on SDP program implementation. As SDP interns are instrumental in implementing many SDP programs, it is important to identify how their national values and ideas affect their work in the field. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the experiences of Americans who had worked as SDP interns. Through the lens of Americanization, we examine the reproduction and distribution of values and ideas of American SDP interns working abroad. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 11 former American SDP interns to explore their perspectives and reflections on the work they carried out as American SDP interns. Throughout the interviews, American ideas rooted in neoliberalism, capitalism, and education appeared as conceptual influences that were woven into their SDP internship experience. The findings indicated that, in their role as American SDP interns, the participants were at once complicit in and resistant to reproducing inequitable power relations, constantly wrestling with personal ideologies and American sporting values that did not align with cultural and social norms of the host countries. Implications of this study emphasize the continued need for SDP analyses to identify and critically consider nation-specific values and ideas of SDP workers and their impact on the local implementation of SDP programs.
Keywords
Americanization, imperialism, interns, neoliberalism, sport for development and peace
Department
Kinesiology
Recommended Citation
Michael S. Dao and Jessica W. Chin. "The Americanization of sport for development and peace: Examining American SDP intern experiences" Journal of Sport for Development (2021): 32-47.
Comments
This is the Version of Record and can also be read online here.