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Saturday, May 3, 2025

Sport and gender ideology

by

1567 days ago
20210117

Gen­der ide­ol­o­gy is a set of in­ter­re­lat­ed ideas about mas­culin­i­ty and fem­i­nin­i­ty and re­la­tion­ships be­tween men and women and gen­der ide­ol­o­gy sup­ports the phi­los­o­phy that sport is a male-es­tab­lished con­ven­tion that pro­motes tra­di­tion­al gen­der roles and ad­vances male su­prema­cy and dom­i­nance.

In the west­ern hemi­sphere, tra­di­tion­al gen­der role ex­pec­ta­tions en­cour­aged girls and women to be pas­sive, gen­tle, del­i­cate and sub­mis­sive.

Their par­tic­i­pa­tion in sport­ing ac­tiv­i­ties have his­tor­i­cal­ly been re­signed to those that pro­mot­ed aes­thet­i­cal­ly del­i­cate move­ments (ice skat­ing, gym­nas­tics and horse­back rid­ing) and those that were void of body con­tact (archery, bad­minton, golf and ten­nis).

To­day, fe­males are torn be­tween in­volve­ment in sports and the main­te­nance of their tra­di­tion­al fem­i­nin­i­ty. If they do par­tic­i­pate in sports out­side of the tra­di­tion­al gen­der stereo­types, they face the risk of be­ing per­ceived and la­belled as mas­cu­line, which can im­pact on their self-es­teem. It is a pas­sage many young girls are not men­tal­ly pre­pared to nav­i­gate.

The per­cep­tion of gen­der bias is al­so ev­i­dent in many oth­er ar­eas of the sport­ing are­na. The dis­tri­b­u­tion of the jobs with­in this field (coach­es, man­agers, of­fi­cials, ad­min­is­tra­tors and sports jour­nal­ist) is high­ly skewed to­wards men and has ad­verse­ly im­pact­ed on the ad­vance­ment of fe­males in sport. Even though women are cur­rent­ly mak­ing in­roads in these spaces, they are far from ob­tain­ing eq­ui­ty, since ac­cess is con­trolled by males.

One can al­so sug­gest that the me­dia con­tributes to the per­pet­u­a­tion of the male ide­ol­o­gy that dom­i­nates the sport­ing are­na. Male sport­ing events are giv­en promi­nence over fe­male sports and re­search has shown that on av­er­age, 85 per cent of the sports cov­er­age is bi­ased to­wards male sports.

Ad­di­tion­al­ly, there seems to be favouritism to­wards male staffing of sport desks in me­dia hous­es, with the re­sult that women in the me­dia are left with min­i­mal voice in shap­ing their sport poli­cies.

This bi­ased me­dia cov­er­age did not de­vel­op overnight but has been im­pact­ed by the his­tor­i­cal pa­tri­ar­chal val­ue sys­tem of so­ci­eties which have de­val­ued the con­cept of women ath­letes by pro­claim­ing them as in­fe­ri­or to men.

This lack of cov­er­age giv­en to women can lead im­pres­sion­able young fe­males to be­lieve that women’s par­tic­i­pa­tion in sport is not of the same qual­i­ty as that of men and it can have a long-last­ing cyclic ef­fect, thus mak­ing change al­most im­pos­si­ble.

Sport is a high-pro­file and high earn­ing com­mer­cial ac­tiv­i­ty. How­ev­er, there ex­ists a huge in­equity in salaries be­tween male and fe­male ath­letes.

Many ar­gue that this dis­par­i­ty ex­ists be­cause men’s sport re­ceives greater me­dia cov­er­age, en­dorse­ments, spon­sor­ship deals and tele­vi­sion li­cens­es, and, thus, has a larg­er rev­enue flow.

In ad­di­tion, men play in more lu­cra­tive leagues that have a glob­al au­di­ence, es­pe­cial­ly at the elite lev­el.

Com­bined, hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars flow through men’s sport com­pared to women’s sport, hence the rea­son why they are paid high­er salaries. To many, this may look like a rea­son­able as­sump­tion. How­ev­er, the is­sue it­self is a very com­plex one that rais­es con­cerns such as re­turn on in­vest­ment, dis­crim­i­na­tion against women, in­clud­ing lack of vis­i­bil­i­ty, low de­mand for women’s sport, as well as lim­it­ed op­por­tu­ni­ties avail­able to them, which in ef­fect makes it eas­i­er for them to be ex­ploit­ed as they have re­duced ne­go­ti­at­ing pow­er.

De­spite the in­equal­i­ties that ex­ist, there have been some im­prove­ments, though glacial in na­ture. The sport of ten­nis must be ad­mired for the in­tro­duc­tion of equal prize mon­ey for both male and fe­male win­ners of their Grand Slam tour­na­ments. Vol­ley­ball too, since 2015, has in­sti­tut­ed equal earn­ings for its com­pe­ti­tion win­ners. This, how­ev­er, is not the case with many oth­er sports.

One may sug­gest that such dis­par­i­ty ex­ists be­cause the dis­pro­por­tion in wages has be­come in­sti­tu­tion­alised over the years.

For ex­am­ple, FI­FA re­wards fe­male World Cup Win­ners with prize mon­ey that is 40 times less than what their male coun­ter­parts re­ceive. In crick­et, ICC pays the male World Cup win­ners sev­en times more than what they pay their fe­male win­ners.

As world gov­ern­ing sport­ing bod­ies, these lead­ing in­sti­tu­tions have the pow­er to ef­fect changes that pro­vide all-round eq­ui­ty be­tween the gen­ders. Change can come about, but the ide­ol­o­gy be­hind sport must al­so change.

With­in the last thir­ty to forty years, women have chal­lenged the gen­der ide­ol­o­gy in sport and in­creased the par­tic­i­pa­tion of women ath­letes in sport. De­spite this, how­ev­er, the vis­i­bil­i­ty of women ath­letes re­mains low and ca­reers as­so­ci­at­ed with the down­stream of sports are still male-dom­i­nat­ed. Men and boys are sig­nif­i­cant gate­keep­ers for gen­der equal­i­ty and whether they are will­ing to open the gates for ma­jor re­forms is an im­por­tant strate­gic ques­tion.

It means, there­fore, that the pos­si­bil­i­ty of eq­ui­ty changes can come about, but it re­lies heav­i­ly on the over­whelm­ing sup­port of males.

Ken­ny Kits­ingh is an MPhil/PhD Can­di­date in the Fac­ul­ty of Sport


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