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A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure

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A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure. / Hodgkinson, Ian R.; Hughes, Paul.
In: International Journal of Public Sector Management, Vol. 25, No. 1, 20.01.2012, p. 48-63.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hodgkinson, IR & Hughes, P 2012, 'A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure', International Journal of Public Sector Management, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 48-63. https://doi.org/10.1108/09513551211200285

APA

Hodgkinson, I. R., & Hughes, P. (2012). A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure. International Journal of Public Sector Management, 25(1), 48-63. https://doi.org/10.1108/09513551211200285

Vancouver

Hodgkinson IR, Hughes P. A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure. International Journal of Public Sector Management. 2012 Jan 20;25(1):48-63. doi: 10.1108/09513551211200285

Author

Hodgkinson, Ian R. ; Hughes, Paul. / A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure. In: International Journal of Public Sector Management. 2012 ; Vol. 25, No. 1. pp. 48-63.

Bibtex

@article{7724c56e3bce415d8d3b11ebcbbbdb5e,
title = "A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure",
abstract = "PurposeThe transfer to partnership in public sector management has created significantly new modes of service delivery, and is suggested to be the best means of ensuring that disadvantaged groups are socially included. The purpose of this paper is to examine New Leisure Trust (NLT) structures in public leisure provision relative to direct, in‐house managed facilities and privately run Leisure Management Contractor (LMC) facilities. In particular, NLTs receive significant government funds and subsidies through tax breaks that are not forthcoming to rivals, which raises questions as to whether NLTs deserve such aid for delivering upon the social inclusion agenda of the government.Design/methodology/approachThe research involved a national survey questionnaire to 1,060 public leisure service providers in England. Empirical testing through multiple analysis of variance and regression analysis was applied to the dataset.FindingsThe authors find that NLTs do not follow social orientation strategies to any significantly greater degree than rivals, nor seem to create social inclusion to any greater degree. Further, NLTs have the least to gain in terms of business performance from creating social inclusion, whilst in‐house (in particular) and LMC facilities stand to gain the most.Practical implicationsThough each approach to provision examined places a considerable strategic emphasis on being socially oriented, they are not effective at increasing the social inclusion of recreationally disadvantaged groups.Originality/valueThis paper calls for the current public leisure management playing field to be levelled in a rebalance of opportunity and investment through the removal of anti‐competitive measures.",
author = "Hodgkinson, {Ian R.} and Paul Hughes",
year = "2012",
month = jan,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1108/09513551211200285",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "48--63",
journal = "International Journal of Public Sector Management",
issn = "0951-3558",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A level playing field: social inclusion in public leisure

AU - Hodgkinson, Ian R.

AU - Hughes, Paul

PY - 2012/1/20

Y1 - 2012/1/20

N2 - PurposeThe transfer to partnership in public sector management has created significantly new modes of service delivery, and is suggested to be the best means of ensuring that disadvantaged groups are socially included. The purpose of this paper is to examine New Leisure Trust (NLT) structures in public leisure provision relative to direct, in‐house managed facilities and privately run Leisure Management Contractor (LMC) facilities. In particular, NLTs receive significant government funds and subsidies through tax breaks that are not forthcoming to rivals, which raises questions as to whether NLTs deserve such aid for delivering upon the social inclusion agenda of the government.Design/methodology/approachThe research involved a national survey questionnaire to 1,060 public leisure service providers in England. Empirical testing through multiple analysis of variance and regression analysis was applied to the dataset.FindingsThe authors find that NLTs do not follow social orientation strategies to any significantly greater degree than rivals, nor seem to create social inclusion to any greater degree. Further, NLTs have the least to gain in terms of business performance from creating social inclusion, whilst in‐house (in particular) and LMC facilities stand to gain the most.Practical implicationsThough each approach to provision examined places a considerable strategic emphasis on being socially oriented, they are not effective at increasing the social inclusion of recreationally disadvantaged groups.Originality/valueThis paper calls for the current public leisure management playing field to be levelled in a rebalance of opportunity and investment through the removal of anti‐competitive measures.

AB - PurposeThe transfer to partnership in public sector management has created significantly new modes of service delivery, and is suggested to be the best means of ensuring that disadvantaged groups are socially included. The purpose of this paper is to examine New Leisure Trust (NLT) structures in public leisure provision relative to direct, in‐house managed facilities and privately run Leisure Management Contractor (LMC) facilities. In particular, NLTs receive significant government funds and subsidies through tax breaks that are not forthcoming to rivals, which raises questions as to whether NLTs deserve such aid for delivering upon the social inclusion agenda of the government.Design/methodology/approachThe research involved a national survey questionnaire to 1,060 public leisure service providers in England. Empirical testing through multiple analysis of variance and regression analysis was applied to the dataset.FindingsThe authors find that NLTs do not follow social orientation strategies to any significantly greater degree than rivals, nor seem to create social inclusion to any greater degree. Further, NLTs have the least to gain in terms of business performance from creating social inclusion, whilst in‐house (in particular) and LMC facilities stand to gain the most.Practical implicationsThough each approach to provision examined places a considerable strategic emphasis on being socially oriented, they are not effective at increasing the social inclusion of recreationally disadvantaged groups.Originality/valueThis paper calls for the current public leisure management playing field to be levelled in a rebalance of opportunity and investment through the removal of anti‐competitive measures.

U2 - 10.1108/09513551211200285

DO - 10.1108/09513551211200285

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 48

EP - 63

JO - International Journal of Public Sector Management

JF - International Journal of Public Sector Management

SN - 0951-3558

IS - 1

ER -