Purpose

The project aims to investigate intersectional inequities in sport participation for girls, women and non-binary people in Queensland by working with them to envision legacies for the 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

Using a co-creation approach this project expects to identify how and what benefits can be achieved through legacy planning that engages with end-users who have historically been marginalised in sport. In doing so, the expected outcomes of the project include the development of evidence-based resources to improve engagement in sport and to build capacity and sustain meaningful change for communities and organisations.

This project brings together experienced disciplinary and interdisciplinary researchers in the fields of sport sociology, sport management, and feminist sociological theory to address the persistent problem of inequalities in sport and the unfulfilled promise of positive sport participation legacies from mega-sport events

Background

Aims

Methods

In the media

The Matildas effect - will FIFA and other codes change their tune on sportswomen?

Our research team

Dr Adele Pavlidis, Chief Investigator, Griffith University

Prof Simone Fullagar, Chief Investigator, Griffith University

Dr Millicent Kennelly, Chief Investigator, Griffith University

Prof Simon Darcy, Chief Investigator, University of Technology Sydney

Dr Kirsty Forsdike, Chief Investigator, La Trobe University

Prof Holly Thorpe, Partner Investigator, The University of Waikato, NZ

Prof David McGillivray, Partner Investigator, University of the West of Scotland

Dr Diti Bhattacharya, Research Fellow, Griffith University

Get involved

If you are a girl, woman, or non-binary person interested in being involved we would love to hear from you! We are particularly interested in those that are disengaged from sport, and learning from you about why you are disengaged and what might help you engage. Email any of the project team to find out more about volunteering with our project, learning new skills, and contributing to internationally important research.

Workshops

Songwriters workshop

Led by Associate Professor Adele Pavlidis and Professor Simone Fullagar, together with Dr Diti Bhattacharya, their goal has been to find ways to engage people who might otherwise miss out on legacies from the 2032 Games. In particular girls, women and non-binary people who are disengaged from sport or otherwise feel on the margins.

Working with the brilliant community song writing facilitator Deb Suckling, and the talented Bayley Pearl (emerging singer songwriter from the Gold Coast) the research was supported by Everybody Now! to bring people together in a meaningful way to share stories of expectations, pressures and the complexity of sport participation when you don't feel like you belong.

After two workshops a showcase event was held at Miami Marketta, featuring a panel with Leah Clarke, Bgirl extraordinaire, Deb Suckling, Professor Simone Fullagar and the wonderful co-researcher Jasper St Claire. The panel discussed the upcoming 2032 Olympics and, as Deb said, 'investing in venues and facilities is great, but we need to also invest in people' in order to get a lasting legacy.

Feminist slam poetry

In 2023 we invited a small group of women, girls and non-binary people to a feminist slam poetry workshop. The purpose of the workshop was to explore the embodied tensions, desires and emotions related to experiences of belonging and not belonging in sport cultures and spaces.

The participants were engaged and encouraged in a safe space so that each individual felt included , creative and had the opportunity to present their poetry through curious and honest accounts of their lived experience of sport.

We've created an e-book highlighting participants’ lived experiences, bringing unique perspectives to the question of ‘belonging’ in sport.

View the e-book here

Featured poem

How Not To: a listicle of Brute surrender.  By Noeleen Ginnane

In the Media

Enlighten article

Will gender equality be the legacy of the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup?

ABC radio

The Matildas Effect — will FIFA and other codes change their tune on sportswomen?

Contact us

We'd love to hear from you