Exploring children's agency, wellbeing and consent in competitive sport: a case study from a rugby club
dc.contributor.advisor
Fry, Deborah
dc.contributor.advisor
Tisdall, Kay
dc.contributor.author
Barnes, Ruth
dc.date.accessioned
2025-03-31T09:55:13Z
dc.date.available
2025-03-31T09:55:13Z
dc.date.issued
2025-03-31
dc.description.abstract
The wellbeing benefits of children’s sport are well documented, with children
encouraged to participate in sporting activities for their physical and mental health and
for the social opportunities they can provide. At the same time, there has been
increasing awareness that children in organised sport face wellbeing risks. These
concerns relate to excessive exertion or injury but are also connected to abuse and
perpetrated harm. Yet, children continue to participate in sport, and, especially outside
of school settings, this is most often facilitated by parental agreement and resources.
Children playing – and enjoying – sports in contexts in which harm is known to be
possible calls into consideration how wellbeing and harm are understood by those
involved, how children practice agency in this participation and how parental consent
interacts with and affects children’s wellbeing, agency and consent.
Existing research has considered children’s agency and wellbeing at length, resulting
in detailed discussions over meanings across many aspects of children’s lives,
including where children act outside of societal expectations. However, this research
is somewhat limited in its application to children’s agency within sport, particularly as
it relates to the potential for harm. Further, while scholars have considered
experiences of harm, injury and exertion in sport, the field has yet to address
perceptions and co-constructions of wellbeing – including with regards to expectations
around harm. Finally, there is currently a gap in the consideration of how
understandings of parental consent affect children’s experiences in sport, including
children’s agentic practice, their perceptions of wellbeing and harm and their own
consent.
This study aimed to examine the constructions of and interactions between children’s
wellbeing and harm, agency and consent and parental consent in competitive sport.
Three research questions were developed to address this aim:
1. How do children, parents and coaches view and understand children’s
wellbeing and harm, including ‘acceptable’ and ‘unacceptable’ harm, in
competitive sport?
2. How do children, parents and coaches view and understand children’s agency
and consent in competitive sport?
3. How do children, parents and coaches view and understand parental consent
in competitive sport and how does this affect children’s perceptions of their own
wellbeing and harm, agency and consent?
The research used a single embedded case study to answer the research questions
and address its aim. Fieldwork took place with a youth section of a rugby club in
England. Rugby was chosen as a popular sport in England that involves high levels of
physicality. Fieldwork included five observations of relevant teams’ training sessions
(with children aged 14-18), 29 semi-structured interviews with children, parents,
coaches and officials and six group discussions with children aged 14-18. Research
activities also included a review of over 40 governing body and club documents. The
research design included eight child-parent-coach triads as embedded units of
analysis within the broader case study. Ethical considerations were core to all stages
throughout the research planning and implementation, particularly as the research
involved child participants and a potentially sensitive subject matter. Actions to support
ethical research included using voluntary, informed consent practices, attention to
confidentiality and privacy, and consideration of risks and benefits to participants
throughout the study. Ethical approval was obtained from Moray House School of
Education and Sport and ethical practice was further supported by the development
and implementation of a living ethical protocol, including a safeguarding referral
process and information sharing protocol.
Data were analysed using reflective thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2022). This
analysis drew on concepts relating to relational agency, including ‘generagency’
(Leonard, 2016), wellbeing, including subjective wellbeing (e.g., Axford et al., 2014;
Ben-Arieh et al., 2014), the categorisation of harm in sport (e.g., Alexander et al., 2011)
and the communication of consent in sport (e.g., Channon & Matthews, 2021). Based
on this, the findings chapters explore: 1) children’s, parents’ and coaches’ views and
understandings of agency, particularly as connected to ‘generagency’ and the
prominent ‘rugby family’ motif; 2) children’s, parents’ and coaches’ views and
understandings of wellbeing and harm, including co-constructions of acceptable and
unacceptable harm; and 3) children’s, parents’ and coaches’ views of children’s and
parental consent and the impact on children’s agency, wellbeing and harm. The thesis
forefronts children’s relational practice of agency as crucial to their wellbeing in sport,
particularly in the ongoing practice of agency to provide, withhold or withdraw consent.
Further, it highlights how relationships with and actions by adults – parents and
coaches – can co-construct a sporting environment that supports children’s wellbeing,
agency and consent.
This thesis contributes to the fields of research relating to childhood studies and to
children’s sport in its application of concepts – particularly those relating to relational
agency – to children’s experiences within sport. In this regard, it offers a nuanced
approach to understanding children’s agency that may be applied in areas outside of
sport. It also contributes to closing a gap in the understanding of children’s
experiences of consent and the impact of this on children’s agency and wellbeing,
particularly in the identification, establishment and enforcement of consent
boundaries. In this regard, this thesis highlights the importance of trust and
relationships to children’s wellbeing, and within consent discussions and decisions that
affect children’s wellbeing and potential harm.
The thesis concludes by setting out implications for research, policy and practice,
especially for children’s practice of agency and the protection of children from harm in
sport. These emphasise the importance that rules and guidelines relating to physicality
in sport support children’s wellbeing and protect children from harm, given their
contribution to expectations relating to physical injury and in establishing boundaries
to consent. Policy and practice implications also call for actions to raise awareness
and support engagement among parents to ensure awareness of appropriate
behaviours in sporting environments and to facilitate strong intergenerational
relationships, in which shared understandings can support children’s wellbeing.
Finally, the thesis calls for additional research about individual or non-contact sports,
and research that addresses the intersectionality of children’s experiences within
sport.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/43328
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/5868
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
children’s participation in sport
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dc.subject
children’s wellbeing and harm
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dc.subject
children’s agency
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dc.subject
rugby
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dc.subject
team relationships
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dc.subject
wellbeing benefits
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dc.subject
parental consent
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dc.subject
policy and practice
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dc.subject
parent-child relationships in sport
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dc.title
Exploring children's agency, wellbeing and consent in competitive sport: a case study from a rugby club
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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