Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
FIVE - Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 June 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Abbreviations
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- ONE Youth Crime Prevention: Myths and Reality
- TWO Sport Participation and Primary Crime Prevention
- THREE Sports and Secondary Crime Prevention: Youth at Risk
- FOUR Sports and Tertiary Crime Prevention: Desistance from Crime
- FIVE Theory of Change Underlying Sport-Based Programmes
- SIX Emerging Good Practices
- SEVEN Role of Coaches, Mentors, and Facilitators
- EIGHT Crime Prevention Outcomes and Implications for Future Investments
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
As discussed in previous chapters, the relationship between sport and crime has been difficult to disentangle. Some argue that involvement with sport results in a variety of positive impacts for youth including increases in resiliency, selfesteem, self-efficacy, and a wider network of relationships and opportunities (Morgan and Costas Batlle, 2019; Morgan, Parker, and Roberts, 2019; Morgan et al, 2019). Others have noted that there is a link between sport participation and involvement in certain types of delinquency including violence and problematic alcohol use (Stansfield, 2017). It is very clear that involvement in sport can impact different aspects of one's personality and social setting in both positive and negative ways. It is also quite clear that risk-based theories of youth crime prevention rest on shaky evidence and that youth development interventions, through sports or other forms of interventions, must demonstrate how they can produce tangible crime prevention outcomes.
According to a recent UNODC desk review (Samuel, 2018), sport-based crime prevention programmes with welldeveloped methodologies and robust theories of change are the exception rather than the rule. Most programmes fall into the category of local grassroots initiatives, often established by youth for youth, with limited resources and capacity, with only broad identifiable goals, and with no clearly identifiable methodologies or documented assessments of their effectiveness (Samuel, 2018: 62).
There have been several attempts to develop a theory of positive development through sports (Coalter, 2013a; Noble and Coleman, 2016; Holt et al, 2017) and at least one attempt to propose a theoretical framework that links sports to positive youth development (PYD) and crime prevention (Morgan et al, 2019). Despite substantial research progress in the last decade, there is a lack of a clear and coherent theoretical conception of these sport-based prevention programmes, an understanding of how and why they might be expected to work, and, therefore, how they can most effectively be implemented.
This chapter presents an attempt to conceptualize the links between criminological theory and sport-based crime prevention programmes. This is a prerequisite to forming a cogent theory to explain how sport-based programmes can, at least theoretically, produce crime prevention outcomes at the individual level. This involves clarifying existing concepts and connecting them to existing theories commonly used to understand youth offending and desistance from crime.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Youth Crime Prevention and SportsAn Evaluation of Sport-Based Programmes and their Effectiveness, pp. 78 - 93Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2022