| Literature DB >> 35783771 |
Rizwan Ahmed Laar1, Shahnaz Perveen2, Muhamad Azeem Ashraf3.
Abstract
Women's empowerment is a concept describing the promotion of women doing things independently and in their own interests, being more conducive to their future and physical and mental development; this includes participation in different outdoor activities, including sports. This qualitative study presents data collected from 18 young female students at sports and physical education universities in Southern Punjab (SP) in Pakistan, selected using a snowball sampling technique. The current study explores their gendered and lived experiences of playing sports and engaging in physical activities in patriarchal systems by emphasizing the concept of women's empowerment in the context of feminism in sports theory. The findings suggest that the participants faced typical gender stereotypes in their families and communities, which position sports and physical activities as being not feminine. The chances for women to participate in sports and physical activities decrease as they grow up. However, the participants used a range of strategies to advance their interests and academic careers in sports and physical activities by resisting and incorporating dominant discourses of women's participation in sports and physical activities, which also has implications in the internal and external policy domains at the local and national levels. The participants displayed great resilience and optimism, empowering them to enter the male-dominated domains, and thus we labeled them as change agents.Entities:
Keywords: change agents; feminism theory; gender stereotype; physical activities; the international implication; women’s empowerment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35783771 PMCID: PMC9247636 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.857189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Demographic information of the participants.
| Participant (Anonymized) | Age | Hometown | Program level | Noteworthy asset |
|
| 25 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | First-generation woman in higher education; first woman from family in physical education |
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| 24 | Lodhran, SP | 4th semester | First woman from family in physical education; chose major against some family members’ will |
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| 22 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 20 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | Travels alone to the playgrounds for sport(s) despite brother being unwilling |
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| 21 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | Plays sports for own interest, despite family not liking her playing sports |
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| 22 | Bahawalnagar, SP | 4th semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 20 | Bahawalpur, SP | 4th semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 23 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education; arranged her own fee from part-time tutoring |
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| 20 | Bahawalnagar, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 21 | Bahawalpur, SP | 3rd semester | Lived abroad; first woman from family in physical education |
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| 20 | Rahim Yar Khan, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 20 | Rahim Yar Khan, SP | 1st semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 20 | Multan, SP | 1st semester | First woman from family in physical education; Selected physical education even though parents did not like |
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| 22 | Bahawalnagar, SP | 1st semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 22 | Bahawalnagar, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 21 | Bahawalpur, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education; selected this major against elder brother’s will |
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| 22 | Bahawalnagar, SP | 2nd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
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| 22 | Bahawalpur, SP | 3rd semester | First woman from family in physical education |
P*, participant.