dc.description.abstract |
The study examines the experiences of women in sports leadership positions
in the Ghanaian sports industry. The study adopted an interpretive research
paradigm. The study further adopted the use of the phenomenological research
design framework. A total of 13 respondents were selected using purposive,
and snowball sampling approaches for the in-depth interviews. Eight
participants were selected for the focus group discussions via convenience
sampling. The data was collected using interview guides and analysed with the
Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). First, the data analysis
identified that the barriers affecting women’s involvement in sports leadership
are individual mindsets, structural barriers, and institutional barriers. Again,
the study found that determination, work-life balance, access to opportunities,
socio-cultural stagnation, and role incongruity characterise the nexus of
personal, socio-economic and cultural factors that influence women’s
participation in sports leadership. It was also realised that transcending
perceived barriers of involvement, positive professional experiences, and
career development opportunities sparked interest and inspired current
Ghanaian women sports leaders. The proposed strategies to improve women’s
participation in sports leadership include leadership training, and development,
organisational support for leadership diversity, equal access to opportunities,
and social support that targets youthful leadership in sports. The study
recommends that policymakers should create a new National Sports Policy
that capitalizes on the strengths of contemporary evolved sports culture, and
current gender issues to mitigate the loopholes and concerns raised in past
policy and legislation. |
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