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Dive into the research topics where Froukje Smits is active.

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Featured researches published by Froukje Smits.


Sport in Society | 2017

‘Everything revolves around gymnastics’: athletes and parents make sense of elite youth sport

Froukje Smits; Frank Jacobs; Annelies Knoppers

Abstract The continuation of emotional abuse as a normalized practice in elite youth sport has received scholarly attention, often with the use of a Foucauldian framework. The use of sense-making, a theoretical framework that focuses on how meaning is created in ambiguous situations, may give additional insights into the continuation of emotionally abusive coaching practices. The purpose of this study was to apply the seven properties of sense-making to explore how athletes and parents made sense of coaching practices in elite women’s gymnastics. We interviewed 14 elite women gymnasts and their parents to examine how they made sense of what occurred during practices. The results show how the sense-making of athletes and parents was an ongoing activity that resulted in a code of silence and a normalization of abusive coaching practices.


Sport in Society | 2017

'You don’t realize what you see!': the institutional context of emotional abuse in elite youth sport

Frank Jacobs; Froukje Smits; Annelies Knoppers

Abstract Various discourses construct youth sport as a site for pleasure and participation, for positive development, for performance and for protection/safeguarding. Elite youth sport however continues to be a site for emotionally abusive coaching behaviour. Little attention has been paid to how the institutional context may enable or sustain this behaviour. Specifically, how do coaches and directors involved in high-performance women’s gymnastics position themselves in relationship to these discourses to legitimize the ways they organize and coach it? We drew on a Foucauldian framework to analyse the technologies and rationalities used by directors and coaches of elite women’s gymnastics clubs to legitimize and challenge current coaching behaviours. The results of the 10 semi-structured interviews showed how coaches and directors legitimized coaching behaviour using discourses of pleasure, protection, performance and of coaching expertise and assigning responsibility for current coaching behaviour to athletes, parents, (other) coaches and global and national policies.


Sport in Society | 2018

Young Dutch commercially sponsored kite surfers: free as a bird?

Froukje Smits

Abstract While coaches and organizational structures play a pivotal role in the disciplining of young athletes in traditional mainstream organized sports, young kite surfers seem to be free to develop their own skills and create their own identity and subcultures. However, the feeling of freedom of young commercially sponsored kite surfers may be more complex than the popular discourses within action sport cultures suggest. I use a Foucauldian framework to explore how disciplinary power, embedded in time and space, produces athletic skill and identity in adolescent kite surfers and informs their practices of freedom. In this paper, I show how young kite surfers negotiate constraints of space and time that are shaped by relationships with their parents, their kite surfing peers and their commercial sponsors. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eleven commercially sponsored male kite surfers, between 11 and 17 years old. In so doing, I found that although the discourse of freedom associated with kite surfing acts on their experiences, these young athletes were also subjected to disciplinary power produced by temporal and spatial limitations and capabilities, their subculture, digital media and commercialization.


Sport in Society | 2017

‘We must not engage in the blind glorification of sport’: Christian orthodox youths negotiate dominant societal and alternative Reformed sport discourses

Froukje Smits; Annelies Knoppers; Corina van Doodewaard

Abstract There are approximately 250,000 Orthodox Reformed Christians (ORC) in the Netherlands, who live according to a strict adherence to the Bible. The ORC dissociate themselves from the mainstream sport discourse in the Netherlands that regards sport as a societal good. We draw on post-structural perspectives to explore how governmentality enables Dutch ORC youths to resist dominant societal discourses about sport. We used four dimensions to examine how governmentality acts on individuals in: rationality, history, culture and technology. We analysed publications that concern themselves specifically with sport within the denomination of the ORC church and also conducted a combination of semi-structured interviews and focus groups with 32 ORC youths. The results show the power of governmentality and also how ambiguity enables moments of resistance to emerge.


Sport Knowhow XL | 2016

Le Grand Départ Utrecht 2015

Bake Dijk; P. Hover; Hans Slender; Froukje Smits


Sport Knowhow XL | 2016

Le Grand Départ Utrecht 2015 : van grote waarde voor Utrecht

Bake Dijk; P. Hover; Froukje Smits; Hans Slender


Archive | 2016

Het creëren van legacy rond Le Grand Départ Tour de France in Utrecht

Bake Dijk; Hans Slender; Froukje Smits


24th European Association for Sport Management (EASM) Conference 2016: “Memories and identities in sport management in Europe” | 2016

The Legacy of Le Grand Départ Tour de France Utrecht 2015 : Involving the city in the creation of legacy

Bake Dijk; Hans Slender; Froukje Smits


24th European Association for Sport Management (EASM) Conference 2016 | 2016

The Legacy of Le Grand Départ Tour de France Utrecht 2015

Bake Dijk; Hans Slender; Froukje Smits


Archive | 2015

Evaluatie Le Grand Départ Utrecht 2015

Maarten Van Bottenburg; Bake Dijk; P. Hover; Sven Bakker; Froukje Smits; Hans Slender

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Frank Jacobs

The Hague University of Applied Sciences

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