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Dive into the research topics where Ingrid Smette is active.

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Featured researches published by Ingrid Smette.


Sport Education and Society | 2018

Understanding the increase in parents’ involvement in organized youth sports

Kari Stefansen; Ingrid Smette; Åse Strandbu

ABSTRACT As part of an ethnographic study on young people and learning (the knowledge in motion across contexts of learning project, set in Norway), we interviewed a diverse sample of parents of young teenagers, many of whom were active in organized sports. The parents described their level of involvement in sport in a way that contrasted sharply to our own experiences participating in youth sports in the 1970s and 1980s. Back then most parents were absent from the sports fields. This new role of sports in the practice of parenthood is what we investigate in this study. The purpose is to further the understanding of the cultural processes that drive what we see as a marked generational change in the relationship between organized sports and the practice of parenthood. In contrast to previous studies, we also focus on the relationship between generational change and classed patterns in parenting. Our data suggest that across social classes, parents see involvement in sports as normal, and as a way to connect to the child emotionally and to further the childs development. We interpret the significance of sports in the parent–child relationship as related both to the normalization of youth sports that the parents experienced when they grew up, and to the new cultural ideas of parenthood that they encounter as adults. We find that there are tensions embedded in this new form of parenthood that are particularly evident in what we call ‘deep involvement’, an intensified form of parental engagement with youth sports that is practiced primarily by fathers in the economic fraction of the middle class. We conclude that the new role of sport in the practice of parenthood is a classed as well as a generational phenomenon.


Young | 2009

Responsible victims? Young people’s understandings of agency and responsibility in sexual situations involving underage girls

Ingrid Smette; Kari Stefansen; Svein Mossige

Most countries have a legal age of consent, setting the minimum age for the involvement of a young person in sexual relationships. Engaging in a sexual relationship with a person below this age is defined as abuse, even if the minor has consented. At the same time, underage young people often see themselves as knowledgeable agents across a range of situations, including having sexual relations with older persons. Using both quantitative and qualitative data, this article examines the role of the construction of agency in young people’s understanding of different types of sexual situations — from consented sex to situations of physical coercion — involving a minor girl and an adult man. How do constructions of agency affect the labelling of different situations and the attribution of responsibility to the persons involved? The article further discusses how the concept of agency interlinks with gendered sexual scripts in the process of interpretation, thereby reproducing gendered vulnerabilities. The concluding section considers how a contextual approach to youth agency may inform preventive efforts.


Sport Education and Society | 2017

Young people’s experiences of parental involvement in youth sport

Åse Strandbu; Kari Stefansen; Ingrid Smette; Morten Renslo Sandvik

ABSTRACT Recently parental involvement in youth sport has intensified, challenging the understanding of youth sports as an arena where adolescents can develop their identity and autonomy. On this background, our study explores how adolescents understand and negotiate their parents’ involvement in sport and how they define ideal and undesirable forms of parental involvement. Our empirical setting is Norway, and we draw on data from 16 focus group interviews among 13–14-year-olds (n = 92) recruited from two lower secondary schools. The analysis shows that young people distinguish between different aspects of the sport activity when defining ideal and undesirable forms of parental involvement. When discussing sport as a healthy activity necessary for physical and social development, the young people interviewed approve of parents’ role in regulating and encouraging participation. When considering the athletic aspects and peer sociability, however, they see parental involvement as mostly undesirable. The analysis also shows that the adolescents generally describe their parents as attentive to the boundaries their children draw for them about levels and types of involvement. Therefore, young people should be seen not only as subjected to parental involvement but also as active co-constructors of valid parental roles in and beyond the sporting arena.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2017

Parental influence in educational decisions: young people’s perspectives

Kristinn Hegna; Ingrid Smette

Abstract Studies of young people’s experiences of parental influence on their educational choice in different family contexts are lacking. This study explores such experiences among youth in Norway, where educational choice is normatively construed as an autonomous decision. The article draws on data from a survey of 2029 youths that includes open-ended qualitative descriptions of experiences of difficult decisions. The analyses show no differences in experiences of parental influences related to social class. Minority students experience their parents as positive/supportive to the same degree as majority students but as more strongly influencing the decision-making process. Nevertheless, minority and majority youth express having made their own choice to the same extent. Negative and strong parental opinions sometimes complicate the choosing process and threaten young people’s sense of autonomy. In the case of youths’ indecision and need for guidance, parental involvement may be a precondition for a young person’s ability to make an autonomous decision.


Tidsskrift for Samfunnsforskning | 2012

«For mye teori» i fag- og yrkesopplæringen – et spørsmål om målsettinger i konflikt? – Europeiske utdanningsregimer og den norske modellen

Kristinn Hegna; Marianne Dæhlen; Ingrid Smette; Sabine Wollscheid


Tidsskrift for Samfunnsforskning | 2006

«Det var ikke en voldtekt, mer et overgrep » – Kvinners fortolkning av seksuelle overgrepserfaringer

Ingrid Smette


Tidsskrift for kjønnsforskning | 2014

Angrep mot kjønnsfriheten: Unge jenters erfaringer med uønsket beføling

Kari Stefansen; Ingrid Smette; Dagmara Bossy


Sosiologisk tidsskrift | 2005

Om å holde seg for god – Subjekt-perspektiv på ungdom som bruker seksuelle tjenester som byttemiddel

Ingrid Smette; Kristinn Hegna


Tidsskriftet Norges Barnevern | 2017

Barn og unges utsatthet for fysisk vold fra foreldre. Endringer i mild og grov vold fra 2007 til 2015

Mette Løvgren; Kari Stefansen; Ingrid Smette; Svein Mossige


Norsk sosiologisk tidsskrift | 2017

Enhetsskolens ulike lærerblikk

Ingrid Smette

Collaboration


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Kari Stefansen

Norwegian Social Research

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Kristinn Hegna

Norwegian Social Research

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Svein Mossige

Norwegian Social Research

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Åse Strandbu

Norwegian Social Research

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Marianne Dæhlen

Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences

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Mette Løvgren

Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences

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Morten Renslo Sandvik

Norwegian School of Sport Sciences

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Viggo Vestel

Norwegian Social Research

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