Understanding educational inequalities in sports participation through structurally based resources and individual agency - a sequential mediation analysis.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Andrea L Mudd, Michèlle Bal, Frank J van Lenthe, Carlijn B M Kamphuis
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Abstract

Educational inequalities in sports participation remain a public health issue in the Netherlands. Combining structurally based resources from Pierre Bourdieu's theory of capital with Amartya Sen's conceptualization of individual agency may offer new insights into the complex mechanisms that drive these inequalities. Specifically, we posited that the way individuals are able to exercise their agency within the structurally based economic, social, and cultural resources they have access to may help explain educational inequalities in sports participation.Data from two waves of the GLOBE study (2014, 2021) were used to test whether two sequential mediators, structurally based resources followed by individual agency, help explain the relationship between educational level and sports participation. Adults aged 25 and older residing in Eindhoven, the Netherlands self-reported highest attained educational level, structurally based resources (economic, social, and embodied cultural capital), individual agency (self-control, perceived choice, and reflexivity), and sports participation. A sequential mediation analysis using structural equation modelling was used to test the direct effect of education on sports participation, the sequential indirect effect through both mediators, and partial indirect effects through each mediator individually.Educational level was positively associated with sports participation. The hypothesized sequential mediation pathway was not supported; educational level was positively associated with structurally based resources and structurally based resources were positively associated with individual agency, but individual agency was not related to sports participation. Though not through individual agency, structurally based resources helped explain educational inequalities in sports participation.Having access to more economic, social, and cultural resources may empower individuals by increasing their agency. This increased agency was not associated with sports participation, which could be because sports participation is not universally valued as a goal. The conceptualization and operationalization of individual agency in the context of sports participation warrants more research. We found that structurally based resources helped explain a substantial portion of educational inequalities in sport, so we propose that policies alleviating more than just economic barriers to sports participation, but also social and cultural barriers, may help reduce educational inequalities in sports participation in the Netherlands.

通过基于结构的资源和个人能动性来理解体育运动参与中的教育不平等--顺序中介分析。
在荷兰,体育运动参与方面的教育不平等仍然是一个公共健康问题。将皮埃尔-布迪厄(Pierre Bourdieu)资本理论中的结构性资源与阿马蒂亚-森(Amartya Sen)的个人能动性概念相结合,可以为我们提供新的视角,揭示导致这些不平等现象的复杂机制。具体来说,我们认为,个人在其所能获得的结构性经济、社会和文化资源范围内行使代理权的方式,可能有助于解释体育参与中的教育不平等现象。我们使用了两波 GLOBE 研究(2014 年和 2021 年)的数据,以检验结构性资源和个人代理权这两个顺序中介是否有助于解释教育水平和体育参与之间的关系。居住在荷兰埃因霍温的 25 岁及以上成年人自我报告了最高受教育水平、结构性资源(经济、社会和体现性文化资本)、个人能动性(自我控制、感知选择和反射性)和体育参与情况。我们使用结构方程模型进行了顺序中介分析,以检验教育对体育参与的直接影响、通过两个中介产生的顺序间接影响以及通过每个中介产生的部分间接影响。假设的顺序中介途径未得到支持;教育水平与结构性资源正相关,结构性资源与个人代理正相关,但个人代理与体育参与无关。虽然不是通过个人能动性,但基于结构的资源有助于解释体育参与中的教育不平等。这种能动性的增强与体育运动参与度无关,这可能是因为体育运动参与度并非普遍重视的目标。在体育参与的背景下,个人能动性的概念化和可操作性需要更多的研究。我们发现,结构性资源有助于解释体育教育不平等的很大一部分原因,因此我们建议,缓解体育参与的经济障碍以及社会和文化障碍的政策可能有助于减少荷兰体育参与的教育不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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