Sport for All and Social Inclusion of Individuals with Impairments: A Case Study from Brazil
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Overview of Sport Participation and Inclusion Discourses
3.1. The Launch of Sport for All in Brazil
3.2. The New Constitution and Access to Sport
3.3. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
- To encourage and promote the participation, to the fullest extent possible, of persons with disabilities in mainstream sporting activities at all levels;
- To ensure that persons with disabilities have an opportunity to organize, develop and participate in disability-specific sporting and recreational activities and, to this end, encourage the provision, on an equal basis with others, of appropriate instruction, training, and resources;
- To ensure that persons with disabilities have access to sporting, recreational, and tourism venues;
- To ensure that children with disabilities have equal access with other children to participation in play, recreation and leisure and sporting activities, including those activities in the school system;
- To ensure that persons with disabilities have access to services from those involved in the organization of recreational, tourism, leisure, and sporting activities [36].
3.4. Rio 2016 Paralympics and Sport Participation Legacy
- ensuring strong legacies for all Olympic and Paralympic sports and for community and youth recreation, and;
- optimizing the social impact of sport on the city and its people [41] (p. 9).
4. Discussion
- a series of complex interactions between environmental factors and personal characteristics that provide opportunities to;
- access public goods and services;
- experience valued and expected social roles of one’s choosing based on his/her age, gender and culture;
- be recognized as a competent individual and trusted to perform social roles in the community, and;
- belonging to a social network within which one receives and contributes support [56] (p. 82).
- Segregated activities, specially thought for and proposed for people with impairments and practised in separate times and spaces;
- Parallel activities, where athletes with impairments train separately with their peers, but the group is part of a local sports club;
- Disability sport activities that are typically practised by the participants with impairments, but can also have children and adults with and without impairments included in disability sport together, following the rules of a specific parasport;
- Open activities, where everyone is involved in the same activity, which can be cooperative or unstructured movement games, with minimal or no adaptations to the environment or equipment;
- Modified activities designed for all, with specific adaptations to space, rules, tasks, and equipment.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | The social model views disability as a result of the way society is organized. It claims that because social order is unjust, people with impairments face attitudinal, environmental, and institutional barriers. These obstacles make it harder for these individuals to take control of their lives and denote the need for laws and policies to address them. |
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Kirakosyan, L. Sport for All and Social Inclusion of Individuals with Impairments: A Case Study from Brazil. Societies 2019, 9, 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc9020044
Kirakosyan L. Sport for All and Social Inclusion of Individuals with Impairments: A Case Study from Brazil. Societies. 2019; 9(2):44. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc9020044
Chicago/Turabian StyleKirakosyan, Lyusyena. 2019. "Sport for All and Social Inclusion of Individuals with Impairments: A Case Study from Brazil" Societies 9, no. 2: 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc9020044
APA StyleKirakosyan, L. (2019). Sport for All and Social Inclusion of Individuals with Impairments: A Case Study from Brazil. Societies, 9(2), 44. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc9020044