This Op-Ed written by SSJ author Dr. Ajhanai Keaton on the 1-year anniversary of BG's return to the US features the work of Keaton, Frederick, Branch, & Pegoraro, published in @SSJ_Journal
https://t.co/3wUs8LNNtK via @sbj
Check out a new podcast with SSJ author @StaceyPope20 and be sure to check out her study on media coverage of women's football published free to read in SSJ!
https://t.co/x4oeOO9ff3
New podcast for @BBCRadio3 with @DrKatieTaylor looks at all things women, football and inequality, past and present. Draws on @ahrcpress research. Thanks for invite. https://t.co/4R8DD2T6m2
Read a popular article from @SSJ_Journal! Contradiction or Cohesion? Tracing Questions of Protection and Fairness in Scientifically Driven Elite Sport Policies https://t.co/HjquATRHmc #sportsociology
SSJ is pleased to announce a special issue call for papers!
“Sports and the Limits of the Binary: Trans and Nonbinary Athletes and Equity in Sport”
Guest Editors: @shereebekker, @annaposbergh, @BaethAnna, @AliGreey, and Roc Rochon
https://t.co/CWR3Nh3lUF
To celebrate SSJ's 40th anniversary we're revisiting our Top-10 articles for each decade. Check out the top articles from the 1990s now freely available on our Top 40 at 40
https://t.co/RVFUJUC96B
NASSS is now accepting applications for the 2023 @SSJ_Journal Early Career Researcher Award! The award is open to all members who have received a PhD within the previous seven years. Application is due April 17 at 5 PM ET. For full details go to:
https://t.co/qe1oPCRaFA
Check out "Pipelines on the Gridiron: Player Backgrounds, Opportunity Structures and Racial Stratification in American College Football by Kyle Siler recently cited in Scientific American. https://t.co/riSsGQQ6lq
https://t.co/Oi8nc72VHl
This year the Sociology of Sport Journal celebrates its 40th anniversary. Check out the new features on our website, including our "Top 40 @ 40" and the history of NASSS Award winning articles. - CC https://t.co/pifTF2rpZX
In a study exploring referee bias, Andrew Dix found players on HBCU men's basketball teams were more likely to have personal fouls called against them relative to players on PWI men's basketball teams. From our March issue: https://t.co/EvbCwWnb56
From the March issue: Using Margaret Archer’s Morphogenetic Approach, @iainlindsey and @gareth_wilts examine how transformative social change can be applied to Sport for Development (SFD) efforts. https://t.co/wKNT3kZ734