8,005 results
Search Results
52. Comparison of the holiday tourism constraints of mono- and bicultural people
- Author
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Davras, Özgür, Caber, Meltem, and Crawford, Duane
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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53. Convergence of Boundaries in Tourism, Hospitality, Events, and Leisure: Defining the Core and Knowledge Structure.
- Author
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Lehto, Xinran Y., Kirillova, Ksenia, Wang, Dan, and Fu, Xiaoxiao
- Subjects
HOSPITALITY ,LEISURE ,TOURISM ,MODERN society ,SCHOLARLY method - Abstract
This study aims to address the convergence of boundaries in Tourism, Hospitality, Events, and Leisure (THEL) fields. We offer a synthesized definition of THEL and discuss a set of meta-concepts that define the core and knowledge structure of THEL. We argue that hospitality, experience, and place are unifying constructs upon which all THEL scholarship activities and practice fields are established. The paper invites a system-wide conversation to stimulate thinking regarding academic discipline building at a time when technological and societal forces are transforming work, life, and education. This research contributes to modernization of THEL and engenders new perspectives to guide future scholarship. This paper invites a reassessment of curricular structures to stay relevant and adaptive to changing needs of contemporary societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. Leisure Education Grounded in Social Justice.
- Author
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Dattilo, John
- Subjects
SOCIAL justice ,CULTURAL values ,GOAL (Psychology) ,DECISION making ,PROBLEM solving ,LEISURE ,RECREATIONAL therapy ,PHYSICAL activity ,WELL-being - Abstract
Leisure education is an important area of service that encourages people to participate actively in physically, mentally, socially, and emotionally healthy activities. This educational approach empowers people to make decisions, discover new information and resources about leisure, and navigate stressful transitions throughout their lives. The purpose of this paper is to clarify that leisure education is grounded on principles of social justice and facilitates two synergistic service contexts of inclusive leisure and therapeutic recreation (TR). To achieve this purpose, this paper contains supportive literature identifying that leisure education grounded in social justice principles is a facilitation technique used in providing inclusive leisure and TR services. Further, the literature presented in the paper provides a rationale for grounding leisure education on social justice to assist people in achieving goals of leisure associated with authenticity and self-determination, positive health and well-being, and flourishing. The paper increases understanding of leisure education and ways TR practitioners can use it to positively support people to live the lives they value. Therefore, this paper provides a unique contribution to the literature by identifying that social justice can be the basis for leisure education as a component of both TR and inclusive leisure services designed to help participants experience authenticity and self-determination culminating in leisure, positive health, well-being, and flourishing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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55. Putting the unconscious on paper: VISUAL ARTS: A rare and welcome show of the reclusive Cy Twombly's work shows the artist at the height of his powers, says C
- Author
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Mullins, Charlotte
- Subjects
Leisure ,Arts ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Think of exceptionalAmerican artists of theimmediate postwar years and tough New York abstract expressionists like Jackson Pollock and Robert Motherwell come to mind. Consider Europe and an altogether different sensibility [...]
- Published
- 2004
56. A ride on Hadid's magical urban carpet: ARCHITECTURE: The completion of Cincinnati's arts centre is a defining moment for its hitherto 'paper' architect. Mark Irving finds out why, and how she has made a success of a difficult site
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Irving, Mark
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Arts ,Leisure ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Architecture offers few really breakthrough moments but this may be one of them. The context is surprising: Cincinnati, straddling the Ohio River, doesn't seem to offer much beyond the blandness [...]
- Published
- 2003
57. Profiting when the famous put pen to paper COLLECTABLES
- Author
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Bridge, Rachel
- Subjects
Arts ,Leisure ,Consumer advocacy ,Consumer protection ,Personal finance ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Ronald Reagan reputedly asked his mother-in-law to sign them. The Beatles are believed to have occasionally used their roadies and John Travolta apparently gets his secretary to do it. Some [...]
- Published
- 2003
58. Le Monde at war The publication of an explosive investigative book has plunged France's flagship newspaper into crisis. Jo Johnsonexplores why, in a country where fewer than 15 per cent of the population read a daily paper, the expose has touched such a nerve
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Johnson, Jo
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Leisure ,Arts ,Crime -- France ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
One war is ending, another beginning. In his office in the heart of the Latin Quarter in Paris, Jean-Marie Colombani has just decided on the headline for the front page [...]
- Published
- 2003
59. The paper boys who turned to Page 3 They swayed governments, invaded privacy and specialised in titillation. Joan Smith on the men who lowered the tone of British journalism
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Smith, Joan
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Arts ,Leisure ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Newspapermen: Hugh Cudlipp, Cecil Harmsworth King and the Glory Days of Fleet Street by Ruth Dudley Edwards Secker Pounds 20, 472 pages Journalism: Truth or Dare? by Ian Hargreaves OUP [...]
- Published
- 2003
60. Paper tigers OBSERVER COLUMN
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Leisure ,Arts ,Banking, finance and accounting industries ,Business ,Business, international - Abstract
Everyone loves a parade but evidently the same doesn't hold true for a circus. While anti-war protesters massed round the world, a po-faced band decamped to New York's Madison Square [...]
- Published
- 2003
61. The Continued Evolution of Disabilities , an Inter- and Multi-Disciplinary Journal of Disability Research.
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Cordier, Reinie
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SERIAL publications ,MENTAL health ,LEISURE ,SPORTS participation ,MEDICAL research ,PUBLISHING ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,COVID-19 pandemic - Published
- 2024
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62. Is tourism really an escape from everyday life? Everyday leisure activities vs leisure travel activities of expats and emirati nationals living in the UAE
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Slak Valek, Natasa and Fotiadis, Anestis
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- 2018
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63. LOVE NOTES.
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STONEY, KIMBERLY
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LEISURE ,PLAY ,RECREATION - Abstract
The article offers step-by-step instructions for making love notes and bookmarks for Valentine's Day.
- Published
- 2018
64. Older adults' participation in artistic activities: a scoping review.
- Author
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Chacur, Karima, Serrat, Rodrigo, and Villar, Feliciano
- Subjects
LEISURE ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,PATIENT participation ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,CREATIVE ability ,QUALITY assurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LITERATURE reviews ,CONTENT analysis ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This scoping review analyses existing literature on older adults' participation in artistic activities. It identifies gaps in this research topic and suggests new directions for research. We followed the five-step process defined by Arksey and O'Malley (2005) and extended by Levac et al. (2010). Four electronic databases were searched, and 129 peer-reviewed articles were included in the scoping review. Research into older adults' participation in artistic activities has grown in the last ten years. However, empirical papers tend to focus on the outcomes of older people's participation in artistic activities, in particular the benefits. Most papers centred on facilitators to examine the antecedents of this type of participation among people in late life. Research about experiences, potentially negative consequences or barriers to older adults' participation in artistic activities have been largely overlooked. We identified several gaps in the literature, which we classified as: related to the artistic activities that were considered; the potential costs and barriers for older adults' participation in artistic activities; older adults' voices and their diversity; the life course perspective; and a contextual view of research on the topic. These gaps suggest challenges that future research on older adults' participation in artistic activities should consider. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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65. STUDY ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND EVOLUTION OF THE SUSTAINABLE AGRITOURISM ACTIVITY AT A BOARDING HOUSE IN CRASNA MUNICIPALITY - GORJ, ROMANIA.
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CĂLINA, Jenica and CĂLINA, Aurel
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TOURISM ,SUSTAINABILITY ,HOUSING management ,NATURAL resources ,LEISURE ,SUSTAINABLE tourism - Abstract
The paper presents the way in which a tourist reception structure can practice sustainable tourism based on the conservation and protection of all natural and anthropic resources. The case study was carried out at a Boarding house in the commune of Crasna-Gorj, where authentic agrotourism is practiced, because a series of specialties served at the table to tourists are prepared with products obtained from their own household, in which traditional agriculture is practiced, based on obtaining high quality products, with as few chemical substances as possible. At the same time, the main natural and anthropogenic factors favorable to the practice of tourism were presented, and an analysis of tourist traffic and the quality of management at the boarding house under study was carried out. In the analysis of the tourist potential and activity, more emphasis was placed on the objectives and leisure and gastronomy activities specific to the place, through which the Boarding house can create an offer of great originality and attractiveness for tourists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
66. s-CRIq: the online short version of the Cognitive Reserve Index Questionnaire.
- Author
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Mondini, Sara, Pucci, Veronica, Pastore, Massimiliano, Gaggi, Ombretta, Tricomi, Pier Paolo, and Nucci, Massimo
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COGNITION disorders ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,LEISURE ,LIFESTYLES ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,SELF-evaluation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEARCH engines ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Background: The wide use of the term Cognitive Reserve (CR) is in need of a clear and shared definition of its concept and of the development of new tools, quick and easy to use and updated for the people of today. This study describes the online short CRIq (s-CRIq), the new shorter version of the CRIq, following an item analysis revision, and compares the data distribution of different samples. Methods: The s-CRIq was administered online to 435 people while another 440 filled out the s-CRIq in self-administration. A further 588 participants had been administered the original paper-and-pencil long CRIq and 344 the online long CRIq. Results: The major difference in the databases of s-CRIq versus the long versions is an increased score in education and in leisure activity. However, the density distributions of the total score of CRI in the 4 databases share 64% of their areas, and at least two of them share 84%. Conclusion: The s-CRIq proved to be a simple and easy-to-administer tool. Similarly, to the original version, the s-CRIq is freely available on the web, and it is our hope that it will be of fruitful use for researchers and clinicians alike. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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67. Unilateral divorce laws affect women's welfare.
- Author
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Ciacci, Riccardo, Martín Rodrigo, María José, and Núñez Partido, Antonio
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DIVORCE law ,MARRIAGE ,LEISURE ,GENDER inequality ,DIVORCE - Abstract
This paper studies whether unilateral divorce affects women's welfare. Unilateral divorce refers to a divorce regime where each of the spouses can dissolve the marriage unilaterally (i.e. without mutual consent). First, it builds a simple theoretical model that finds that women are better off under unilateral divorce than under mutual consent. Second, it makes use of data from the U.S. between 2003 and 2014 to explore empirically whether unilateral divorce affects the amount of time women devote to three different activities that might be seen as proxies of their level of welfare, such as, housework, leisure and relaxing activities, and personal care. We find causal evidence suggesting that unilateral divorce improves women's welfare. Namely, it reduces housework carried out by women, while it increases their amount of time devoted to leisure and relaxing activities, and personal care. Further results suggest these changes are not due to improvements in gender equality per se. Moreover, we find that the decrease in housework and the surges in leisure and relaxing activities are permanent, whereas the increase in personal care is temporary. These findings are important from a policy perspective to motivate the introduction of unilateral divorce laws. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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68. The Spatial Association between Residents' Leisure Activities and Tourism Activities Using Colocation Pattern Measures: A Case Study of Nanjing, China.
- Author
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Zheng, Jiemin, Hu, Mingxing, Qi, Junheng, Han, Bing, Wang, Hui, and Xu, Feifei
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LEISURE ,URBAN transportation ,PUBLIC spaces ,TOURISM ,CITIES & towns ,TOURISM websites - Abstract
With the increasing trend of residents and tourists sharing urban spaces, the boundary between leisure spaces and tourism spaces is gradually being blurred. However, few studies have quantified the spatiotemporal correlation patterns of residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities. To fill this gap, this paper takes Nanjing as an example to study the temporal and spatial correlation between residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities based on mobile phone signal data. First, through kernel density analysis, it is found that there is a spatial overlap between residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities. Then, the spatial and temporal correlation patterns of residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities are analyzed through the colocation quotient. According to our findings, (1) residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities are not spatially correlated, indicating that they are relatively independent in space both during the week and on weekends. (2) On weekday afternoons, the spatial correlation between residents' and tourists' leisure activities is strongest. On weekends, the night is when residents' leisure activities and tourists' activities are most closely related. (3) The correlation area is mainly distributed in areas near famous scenic spots, as well as public spaces such as parks and squares. Based on the above analysis, this paper aims to study the resident-tourist interaction in the spatial context to provide directions for improving the attractiveness of cities, urban transportation, services, and marketing strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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69. Two Fields, Overlapping Messages: Investigating the Related Concepts of Leisure Studies and Physical Education.
- Author
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Sargent, Julia
- Subjects
PHYSICAL education ,HIGHER education research ,LEISURE ,PHYSICAL activity ,COMMUNITY education - Abstract
Inter-disciplinarity and bridging disciplinary boundaries is a practice that scholars often strive for within higher education research. Kinesiology encompasses many aspects such as physical activity, physical education and community. In this article, the two fields of leisure studies and physical education are analyzed as a means to argue that these fields have overlapping messages that are currently being missed within scholarship. Using the theory of boundary crossing, this paper will argue that as a result of missing these current messages, we are at risk of disconnecting education from the social context of leisure. As a result of such analysis, this paper presents conclusions on ways in which research and practice can seek to strengthen the connection between these contexts and open new lines of enquiry that would be fruitful to explore. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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70. Research on Knowledge Learning of COVID-19 Video Viewers: Based on Cognitive Mediation Model.
- Author
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Liu, Jingfang, Lu, Caiying, and Cai, Jingxian
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PUBLIC health surveillance ,LEISURE ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,COVID-19 ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,AGE distribution ,COGNITION ,HEALTH literacy ,LEARNING strategies ,RISK perception ,SEX distribution ,SURVEYS ,PHILOSOPHY of education ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,ATTENTION ,NEWSPAPERS ,PATH analysis (Statistics) ,VIDEO recording ,MEDICAL research ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
During the COVID-19 epidemic, social media has become the main channel for people to learn information related to the epidemic, among which information in the form of videos has played a significant role in the prevention and control of COVID-19. However, few studies have analyzed the process of knowledge learning of individuals through watching COVID-19 videos. Therefore, to explore the process of COVID-19 video viewers' knowledge acquisition, this paper constructs a knowledge learning path model based on the cognitive mediation model and dual coding theory. A sample of 255 valid questionnaires was collected to validate this model. The results of this study show that an individual's perceived risk of COVID-19 affects their surveillance motivation positively, while surveillance motivation further stimulates the attention and elaboration about the information in COVID-19 videos. Among them, attention positively influences the elaboration about the information. Ultimately, both an individual's attention and elaboration positively influence the knowledge he or she acquires from the COVID-19 videos. This paper not only verifies the hypothesized relationships in the original cognitive mediation model, but also extends the model to the context of video knowledge learning. Analyzing the knowledge learning process of COVID-19 video viewers, this paper can provide suggestions for government propaganda departments and relevant media to improve public knowledge of COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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71. 'Alcohol is life, it’s part of us': Examining the Everyday Experiences of Alcohol Use in Botswana
- Author
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Sebeelo, Tebogo B.
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Original Paper ,Government ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Botswana ,business.industry ,Public health ,Social activity ,Culture ,Everyday Experience ,Control (management) ,Perspective (graphical) ,Sociability ,virus diseases ,Public relations ,Harm ,Embodied cognition ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Alcohol consumption ,Sociology ,business ,Database transaction ,Leisure - Abstract
Efforts to control and regulate alcohol has recently gained steam in Botswana. Inspired by a public health perspective, the government of Botswana has recently increased the alcohol tax levy, reduced the hours of operation for bars and increased penalties for alcohol-related offences to control alcohol-related harm. While these reforms have been central to policymaking, and caused some controversy, not much is known about the everyday experiences of alcohol consumers in Botswana. Drawing from semi-structured interviews (n = 40) collected amongst drinkers over a five-year period, this paper examines the everyday use of alcohol in Botswana. The analysis demonstrates that alcohol use constitutes an important part of leisure and night-time economy (NTE) activities in Botswana. It is a functional social activity that is used by people to take time away from the routines and pressures of daily life. More importantly, it is pleasurable to people, enhances sociability, and partaken as a form of transaction between men and women in bars. There is need for policy makers to consider the embodied experiences of alcohol use when designing alcohol interventions in Botswana.
- Published
- 2021
72. Scientific research in the tourism, leisure and hospitality field: a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
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Merigó, José M., Mulet-Forteza, Carles, Martorell, Onofre, and Merigó-Lindahl, Carolina
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TOURISM research ,HOSPITALITY ,LEISURE ,TOURISM ,KEYWORDS - Abstract
This paper presents an overview of the most cited papers in all the journals indexed in the Web of Science in the tourism, leisure and hospitality fields through a bibliometric approach. The paper presents several lists with the most cited papers and the publication and citation structure of the last decades in the tourism, leisure and hospitality fields. It also analyzes how the main topics and keywords have changed in these areas in order to raise awareness of the topics and keywords that will predominate in the research in these fields over the next years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
73. Complexity theories and ethnographies in planning for leisure-led regional development.
- Author
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Meekes, Jasper F., Buda, Dorina Maria, and de Roo, Gert
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REGIONAL development ,REGIONAL planning ,COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) ,ETHNOLOGY ,EMPLOYMENT agencies - Abstract
Leisure-led regional development refers to leisure as a mechanism to achieve broad societal goals within a region: economic revenue, employment and service levels but also cultural or conservationist ambitions. Engaging in such leisure-led regional development proves a complex matter. Based on ethnographies of leisure in the Dutch province of Fryslân conducted over a five-year period between 2013 and 2018, this paper argues that combining theoretical understanding of complexity theories with analyses based on both evolutionary and discursive approaches results in enhanced understanding of the interactions shaping uncertainty in leisure development. Results of field observations, interviews, participation and document analysis show that planning for leisure-led regional development should consider autonomous and evolutionary processes, whilst focusing on purposefully influencing the interactions and perspectives of actors in leisure. More precisely, this means shaping the narratives and practices in these institutions which make specific interactions more likely to develop. This can be undertaken by including in planning efforts the individual perspectives and emotions among actors in the regional leisure sector. To cope with uncertainty at the heart of leisure-led regional development, an adaptive strategy should be adopted, both in the planning efforts taken and in how such efforts are monitored and evaluated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. A visual analysis intergenerational play histories and practices: five generations of an Australian family.
- Author
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Keary, Anne, Garvis, Susanne, and Walsh, Lucas
- Subjects
INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,FAMILIES ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,LEISURE ,SOCIAL change - Abstract
Exploring play and leisure histories and practices in a visual analysis of family photos opens ways to scrutinize intergenerational relationships. In this paper, we explore ideas about interactions between the old and young, and within and across generations through a visual analysis of play and leisure activities. By looking back through five generations of family photos of one Australian family, we examine play and leisure practices of older generations that are continued, adapted or changed over time as they are passed down through the generations. We argue that intergenerational play and leisure practices can provide a space and time for social interaction between younger and older generations. Importantly, play and leisure practices within families can be a means for growing intergenerational relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
75. Sex-specific analysis of hiking accidents in the Austrian Alps: a followup from 2015 to 2021.
- Author
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Rausch, Linda, Limmer, Mirjam, Pocecco, Elena, Ruedl, Gerhard, Posch, Markus, and Faulhaber, Martin
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HIKING ,SUMMER ,LEISURE ,ACCIDENT victims ,PRACTICE (Sports) - Abstract
Background: Hiking is one of the most popular leisure sport activities practiced in the Alps during the summer season, but bears the risk of mountain emergencies, accidents, and fatalities. This paper provides an updated analysis of hiking accidents for the years 2015 to 2021 in the Austrian Alps, thereby outlining fatal and non-fatal accident characteristics. Methods: For this retrospective analysis, mountain hiking accidents documented by the Austrian Alpine Police during a 7-year period were screened for potential exclusion criteria. The final sample size consisted of 7368 accidents and 7552 victims. The outcome measures were mainly specified by sex, age, injury degree, injury location, pathophysiological characteristics, and cause of injury. Results: The overall annual number of accidents showed a continuous increase from 428 in 2015 to 544 in 2021. In total, 7.1% of the total victims died during the 7-year period, with male hikers being significantly more affected than female hikers (m: 80.8%, f: 19.2%; p ≤ 0.001). The sex specific distribution for non-fatal hiking accidents was 55.9% in women and 44.1% in men. Male victims showed significantly more frequent cardiovascular events (m: 78.5%, f: 21.5%), multiple injuries (m: 60.2%, f: 39.8%), and wounds/blood loss (m: 57.4%, f: 42.6%) than female victims, whereas women showed more fractures (m: 31.5%, f: 68.5%) than men (p ≤ 0.001). Additionally, men were more likely to injure their abdomen/chest (3.7%), head (14.1%), and multiple body parts (26.5%), whereas women were more likely to injure the ir ankle or foot (42.3%). Finally, men were more likely to have an accident during the ascent (24.1%), whereas women during the descent (69.0%) (p ≤ 0.001). Conclusion: This paper provides the latest data and a deeper insight into sex-specific characteristics of mountain hiking accidents in the Austrian Alps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. 'A wholly racialized world': racial inequalities and peer review in leisure and tourism studies.
- Author
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Bandyopadhyay, Ranjan
- Subjects
RACIAL inequality ,LEISURE ,WHITE supremacy ,DIGNITY ,TOURISM ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This paper is a critical autoethnographic exploration of the racial inequalities in leisure and tourism studies by taking the case of the peer review process and the place of scholars of colour within it. Precisely, I challenge the White logic in the peer review process in leisure and tourism studies. While furthering recent scholars' efforts in attempting to challenge positivist epistemologies on mainstream leisure and tourism studies, I ask pertinent questions. Why does academia have to still allow/accept Euro-Amero-centric dogmas to dictate the peer review process? When will academia's enthralment with the 'White supremacy' (i.e. preaching the Others about scientific orthodoxy) come to an end, if at all? I explore how despite all the glorifying talks of diversity, inclusiveness, end of inequality, and sustainable development in academia, 'we still live in a wholly racialized world' where 'privileged whites are supposed to [and in reality] protect and perpetuate not only white myths but also raciology itself'. What if I were a White scholar? Would the reviewers then have made similar comments? This paper is an attempt to resist the hegemonic White logic so that the scholars of colour can theorise about their academic lives with dignity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. How do pleasure travelers manage their travel constraints?
- Author
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Kimmm, Jeongsun
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. Suburban Autonomy? The Case of Inter‐Suburban Commuting Outside Prague.
- Author
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Zévl, Jiří‐Jakub and Ouředníček, Martin
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *METROPOLITAN areas , *WATERSHEDS , *CELL phones , *LEISURE - Abstract
This paper aims to map daily mobility to work and services within the suburban zone of Prague and to explain temporal changes in the structuration of the suburban zone during the day. This involves the identification of local centres outside Prague's administrative boundaries, defining their catchment areas, and exploring the temporal variability of daily mobility. Using mobile phone data, the paper identifies the main flows of commuting to work and mobility for services or leisure activities. The focus on two distinct timeframes presented in two synthetic maps compares the mobility patterns of these activities. Empirical findings identify 53 local centres of inter‐suburban mobility and delimitate their commuting areas. Noticeable variation in mobility patterns throughout the day was observed. Beyond empirical insights relevant to Prague and similar Central and Eastern European cities, the paper contributes to theoretical knowledge by introducing a hierarchical classification of mobility relationships within metropolitan areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Not of This World – Death and Loss in Himalayan Mountaineering.
- Author
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Wilson, Jase
- Subjects
- *
MOUNTAINEERING , *MOUNTAINEERS , *RISK-taking behavior , *LEISURE - Abstract
This paper examines the narratives of three deceased high-altitude mountaineers who lost their lives while climbing in the Greater Himalaya. These individuals were participants in part of a larger ethnographic study on 'Tourism in the Death Zone' conducted over the space of 150 days fieldwork in Pakistan and Nepal in 2019. The paper seeks to explore how these participants depth of immersion in the 'social world' of high-altitude mountaineering eventually lead to their deaths. To do so, the phenomenological concept of the lifeworld [lebenswelt] is utilized to show how the participants lived realities and aspirations became entwined with high-altitude mountaineering – a serious leisure community. Previously, the connection between the lifeworld and serious leisure viewed within the context of extreme risk taking and possible death, has not been explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
80. Commodified Death as the Ultimate Outcome of Social Inequalities: An Analysis of the Squid Game Discourse.
- Author
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Beaunoyer, Elisabeth
- Subjects
- *
EQUALITY , *TELEVISION series , *GAMES , *DISCOURSE - Abstract
This paper explores how death is represented in the popular Netflix television series Squid Game. While death is an overarching theme in this series, there is one feature of its storytelling that sets it apart from other fictional deadly games' televisual or cinematic franchises. Indeed, Squid Game depicts players implicitly consenting to die if they lose the game. This narrative is centered on the deep vulnerabilities that come from social inequalities and create conditions in which death can be staged as merchandise to be sold or bought for entertainment purposes. This paper describes and analyzes how the implicit consent to death was portrayed as the ultimate outcome of social inequalities, as a commodity, and as an object of leisure. We will conclude the paper by discussing the implications of exposure to this discourse during leisure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. A narrative review: integrating leisure time programs for children with hearing impairment to mitigate behavioral problems.
- Author
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Fayed, Gamal
- Subjects
HEARING impaired children ,LITERATURE reviews ,LEISURE ,COGNITIVE development ,STUDENTS with disabilities ,CHILDREN with intellectual disabilities - Abstract
This paper focused on students' leisure time with an exclusive focus on students with hearing disabilities leading to behavioural issues. This sensitive issue needs time to be highlighted as students with such disabilities are naturally restrained from utilizing their leisure time. This research aims to investigate numerous courses of action in the light of a detailed literature review and explore possible ways to reduce their severity and mitigate their effects. This qualitative conceptual review encompasses on how leisure time programs could be integrated and inclusive into the education, workplace, and daily life of children with hearing disabilities. This research effectively offers suggestions and recommendations that could help teachers and parents while dealing with leisure time as an approach to reducing behavioural problems such as practical solutions on various tools and procedures that can be manipulated and used in various workplaces. This review has numerous implications, such as this study could serve as a premier in setting guidelines for applying a leisure time approach to the non-clinical work environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. What is known about adolescent dysmenorrhoea in (and for) community health settings?
- Author
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Dixon, Sharon, Hirst, Jennifer, Taghinejadi, Neda, Duddy, Claire, Vincent, Katy, and Ziebland, Sue
- Subjects
COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,FAMILY medicine ,EVIDENCE gaps ,RESEARCH funding ,CINAHL database ,UNCERTAINTY ,DECISION making ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,LEISURE ,ENDOMETRIOSIS ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUALITY of life ,DYSMENORRHEA ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,WELL-being ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Introduction: Dysmenorrhoea affects many adolescents with significant impacts on education and well-being. In the UK, most of the adolescents who seek care (and many never do), will do so through general practice (primary care). Knowing how best to care for adolescents reporting menstrual pain is an area where UK general practitioners would like better guidance and resources. Methods: This mixed-methods narrative synthesis collates community and specialist evidence from 320 papers about adolescent dysmenorrhoea, with a UK general practice community health perspective. Results: We report a narrative summary of symptoms, cause, consequences and treatments for adolescent dysmenorrhoea. We highlight areas of tension or conflicted evidence relevant to primary care alongside areas of uncertainty and research gaps identified through this synthesis with input from lived experience advisers. Discussion: There is little evidence about primary care management of adolescent dysmenorrhoea or specific resources to support shared-decision making in general practice, although there are evidence-based treatments to offer. Primary care encounters also represent potential opportunities to consider whether the possibility of underlying or associated health conditions contributing to symptoms of dysmenorrhoea, but there is little epidemiological evidence about prevalence from within community health settings to inform this. The areas where there is little or uncertain evidence along the care journey for adolescent dysmenorrhoea, including at the interface between experience and expression of symptoms and potential underlying contributory causes warrant further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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83. Perimenopausal Physical Activity and Dementia Risk: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Simmons, Niall, Ruiz, Miguel Rodriguez, and Ronca, Flaminia
- Subjects
DEMENTIA prevention ,PERIMENOPAUSE ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,RISK assessment ,CINAHL database ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,LEISURE ,PHYSICAL fitness ,DEMENTIA ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Mixed-gender studies predominate in the current literature exploring the interaction between physical activity and dementia risk. Considering that menopause appears to contribute to females' increased risk of cognitive decline when compared to males, further clarity is required on the impact of physical activity in reducing late-life dementia risk, specifically in perimenopausal females. A literature search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, SCOPUS and CINAHL databases yielded fourteen studies for review. A significant inverse relationship between perimenopausal leisure time physical activity, or physical fitness, and future all-cause dementia risk was found in most studies exploring this interaction. Higher levels of perimenopausal household physical activity and combined non-leisure time physical activity also displayed a favorable impact in lowering dementia risk. A dose-response effect was demonstrated, with approximately 10 MET-hour/week of leisure time physical activity required for significant dementia risk reduction. Three of four papers exploring causality provided analyses proposed to counter the reverse causation argument, suggesting that physical activity may indeed have a protective role in reducing dementia risk post-menopause. The current systematic review provides promising results regarding the impact of pre- and perimenopausal physical activity on reducing late-life dementia risk, suggesting that promoting perimenopausal physical activity may serve as a crucial tool in mitigating the risk of post-menopausal cognitive decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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84. Child labour in high performance and professional sport: The struggle for children's rights.
- Author
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Donnelly, Peter
- Subjects
CHILD labor ,PROFESSIONAL sports ,CHILDREN'S rights ,LEISURE ,CHILD abuse - Abstract
Children's right to play and leisure has historically and currently been violated by the many demands of adults. This is now evident in the widespread structuring of the time of middle-class children in programmed activities, including sports. In a contribution to this special issue on leisure, citizenship and human rights the paper begins with an overview of how participation in sports became so work-like for many children. This is followed by an examination of the struggle to define such work as child labour. And the paper concludes with a consideration of how it may be possible to transform sport, protecting participants under the framework of children's and labour rights – nurturing children accomplished in sport without exploiting or abusing them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Students' Well-Being and Academic Engagement: A Multivariate Analysis of the Influencing Factors.
- Author
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Puiu, Silvia, Udriștioiu, Mihaela Tinca, Petrișor, Iulian, Yılmaz, Sıdıka Ece, Pfefferová, Miriam Spodniaková, Raykova, Zhelyazka, Yildizhan, Hasan, and Marekova, Elisaveta
- Subjects
SATISFACTION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,FAMILY roles ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STUDENTS ,LEISURE ,ACADEMIC achievement ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,STUDENT attitudes ,SOCIAL support ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,WELL-being ,VOCATIONAL guidance - Abstract
This paper aims to identify the factors that are positively or negatively impacting students' well-being and their academic engagement. We used partial least-squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) using the data collected through a questionnaire from four countries: Romania, Turkey, Slovakia, and Bulgaria. The model includes seven factors that influence the well-being of students and indirectly their academic engagement: stressors in the students' lives; professors' support; social support from family and friends; the students' perceived satisfaction in their lives; engaging in activities during their leisure time; self-exploration regarding their careers; and environmental exploration regarding their careers. The results show that all factors, except for stressors and environmental exploration regarding their careers, positively influence the students' well-being and thus their academic engagement. These findings are useful for university professors and managers in better organizing activities to increase academic performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. Enforced Togetherness: Change and Continuity in Relationship Satisfaction among Parents during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Fritz, Marni, Um, Sejin, and Risman, Barbara J.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,COUPLES ,SATISFACTION ,LEISURE ,PARENTS - Abstract
This paper investigates how the sharp increase in time spent at home due to COVID-19-related restrictions shaped parents' relationship satisfaction with their partners. Drawing on 78 in-depth interviews with heterosexual partnered parents with at least one child aged 18 or under, we find that this experience of what we call "enforced togetherness" had varied effects on couples' relationships. More than half of the respondents (fifty-five percent) reported improved relationship satisfaction, while fifteen percent reported a decline, and the remaining thirty percent no change. Individuals with higher satisfaction took advantage of enforced togetherness and sought out more frequent and intense communication and leisure activities, underscoring the importance of spending time in strengthening relationships. On the other hand, those who were unable or unwilling to engage in these activities, due to lack of support for increased care needs and their continued uneven distribution across the couple, saw their relationships deteriorate. Finally, individuals experienced stability in their relationships when their prior routines and arrangements remained largely undisrupted by the pandemic. Our findings shed light on the significance of time as a valuable resource for couples' relationships, while at the same time emphasizing the role of their agency in its utilization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. Repositioning Work and Leisure: Digital Nomads Versus Tourists.
- Author
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Kozak, Metin, Cetin, Gurel, and Alrawadieh, Zaid
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TOURISM management ,TOURIST attitudes ,LEISURE ,DIGITAL technology ,INDUSTRIAL management - Abstract
A growing yet fragmented debate addressing digital nomadism has recently emerged across different disciplines, including management, organizational behavior, and mobility studies. However, the intersection between digital nomadism and leisure and tourism activities remains blurred. Integrating existing theoretical assessments, this conceptual paper scrutinize digital nomadism from a tourism and leisure perspective, and attempts to provide a broader understanding of this phenomenon. The paper repositions digital nomads in the center of tourism and travel discourse by describing their key characteristics, mobility motives, destination selection process, and critical features, singling them out from conventional business/leisure tourists. This paper significantly contributes to an emerging stream of tourism research addressing digital nomadism as an emerging lifestyle market and provides timely practical implications for policymakers and industry practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Exploring the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and entrepreneurial intention: the moderating roles of serious leisure, perceived stress and gender.
- Author
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Mouratidou, Maria, Donald, William E., Mohandas, Nimmi P., and Ma, Yin
- Subjects
ACADEMIC achievement ,LEISURE ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,CONSERVATION of natural resources - Abstract
Purpose: Drawing on a framework of conservation of resources theory, the purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention and consider the potential moderating role of (1) participation in serious leisure, (2) perceived stress and/or (3) gender. Design/methodology/approach: A total of 405 UK-based undergraduates completed the questionnaire, with a representative gender split of 57% women and 43% men. Findings: The positive relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention was moderated by serious leisure (stronger when participation in serious leisure increased) and by perceived stress (stronger when levels of perceived stress were lower). However, contrary to our expectations, gender had no statistically significant moderating role. Practical implications: The practical contribution comes from informing policy for universities and national governments to increase individual entrepreneurial intention in undergraduates. Originality/value: The theoretical contribution comes from advancing conservation of resources theory, specifically the interaction of personal resources, resource caravans and resource passageways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. A Conditioned Attitude Model of Individual Discriminatory Behavior.
- Author
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STODOLSKA, MONIKA
- Subjects
DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,BEHAVIOR ,LEISURE ,RECREATION ,PAPER - Abstract
In this paper I present a model of individual-level discrimination that is consistent with the majority of mainstream sociological and psychological theories of discrimination and that reconciles many of the opposing views, to create a fuller and more realistic picture of the complex phenomenon of discrimination. The mechanism that determines whether discrimination occurs and what form it takes consists of three stages. First, an individual uses his or her information set to derive beliefs about a group or an evaluation of its characteristics. Then he or she combines these preexisting beliefs with any new information input received to form an attitude which signifies the degree of hostility or a favorable attitude toward the group members at any particular point in time. Finally, he or she weighs the internal benefits of discrimination against external consequences of such an action and chooses the perceived optimal form of behavior. Based on the predictions of the model, I propose several general policy recommendations for the reduction of discriminatory behavior in leisure settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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90. Reconciling Models of Recreational Route and Site Choices.
- Author
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Bell, Kathleen P. and Strand, Ivar E.
- Subjects
TRAVEL costs ,COST ,TRAVEL ,LEISURE ,RECREATION ,EXPERIENCE ,TIME ,MONEY ,PAPER ,ROUTE choice - Abstract
When employing travel cost models, the unit cost of the essential input (travel) in the household's production of a recreation experience is central to obtaining the preference structure for the recreational good. However, little attention has been given to the choice of the route although the route defines the monetary and time costs used to compute travel costs. Conventional wisdom considers time and money costs in determining the cost per mile in the estimation of site choices but does not use both in determining the route choices and mileages. This paper investigates whether models of recreational site and route choices can be reconciled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Fitness Philanthropy: Exploring a Movement at the Nexus of Leisure, Charity, and Events.
- Author
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Palmer, Catherine, Filo, Kevin, and Hookway, Nicholas
- Subjects
CORPORATE giving ,CHARITY ,CHARITIES ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,SOCIAL facts ,LEISURE - Abstract
Sport is increasingly being used by individuals, charities, and corporate sponsors as a means of acquiring donors and fundraisers to support a variety of social and health causes. This paper examines five key features of fitness philanthropy that when considered together provide new sociological insight into a unique social phenomenon. These are: (a) peer-to-peer giving, (b) social media accounts of embodied philanthropy, (c) community connection and making a difference, (d) fitness philanthropy as social capital, and (e) charity and corporate giving. The significance of the paper is threefold. First, it highlights the ways in which fitness philanthropy points to the changing nature of sport, leisure, and physical activity, whereby fundraising is a key motivation for participation. Second, it examines the types of "empathy paths" created by fitness philanthropy with its emphasis on the body, social media, and peer-to-peer forms of organizational giving. Third, the paper seeks to answer critical questions about fitness philanthropy in the context of neoliberalism and "caring capitalism." Bringing these themes into dialogue with broader research on the intersections between sport and charity adds to the body of sociological research on sport, philanthropy, well-being, and civic engagement by addressing novel conceptual frameworks for the embodied expression of these concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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92. E'Ride on!': The Zwift platform as a space for virtual leisure.
- Author
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Reed, Jack, Dunn, Catherine, Beames, Simon, and Stonehouse, Paul
- Subjects
COMMUNITY of inquiry ,LEISURE ,VIRTUAL reality ,CYCLING ,SPACE environment ,VIRTUAL communities - Abstract
Virtual environments as spaces for leisure are rapidly emerging within the zeitgeist of 21st century leisure practices. One such environment is the Zwift cycling and running app which provides a series of virtual worlds where cyclists and runners can train, race, and socialise with a global community from their own home. As four authors, we are all in some way curious or engaged with Zwift as a platform for our own leisure. We therefore developed a 'community of inquiry' to provide an initial foray into Zwift as a virtual leisure space. We each produced a section of the paper which focused respectively on assemblage theory, micro-sociology, gender, and morality. Through critique and the spirit of collegiality, these texts were refined and are presented in the paper as separate yet interlinked narratives. Our community of inquiry then reconvened to consider the mechanics of game design and to present Zwift as exhibiting the components of an interreality. The paper concludes with implications for further research which includes considering Zwift as a third space and as a panopticon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. The Civilized Bodies of Middle-Aged Women: A Qualitative Study of Participation in an Exercise Intervention in Denmark.
- Author
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Hybholt, Maria
- Subjects
ATTITUDES toward aging ,HEALTH self-care ,EXERCISE ,QUALITATIVE research ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,RESPONSIBILITY ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL norms ,THEMATIC analysis ,LEISURE ,AGING ,HEALTH behavior ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
The present paper explores how aging bodies of middle-aged women can enable and constrain participation in physical activity. The study is inspired by the process sociology of Norbert Elias and builds on qualitative empirical material from passive observations (N = 57), focus groups (N = 51), and individual follow-up interviews (N = 21) with middle-aged Danish women who participated in a 3-month research project with exercise intervention. The qualitative study found that awareness of bodily aging enabled the taking up of exercise in the intervention. Additionally, taking up regular exercise in midlife can be understood as a highly rationalized leisure-time activity in relation to societal moral norms of self-responsibility for own physiological health. Furthermore, the qualitative material indicates that participation enabled a self-realization among the middle-aged women, as strong and capable bodies counter to the biomedical view of decline in the aging body. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Leisure meets health: important intersections and alternative discourses.
- Author
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Young, Janette, Maxwell, Hazel, and Peel, Nicole
- Subjects
LEISURE ,WELL-being ,COVID-19 ,HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
While it is generally accepted in the leisure field that leisure has a role, and arguably a key one in wellness and wellbeing, this is largely at odds with the operations and funding frameworks of contemporary healthcare systems. Governments spend much less on leisure which involves social aspects of health than they do on healthcare systems which are focussed on biomedical interventions. Yet, many leisure and healthcare practitioners and academics are aware of the intersections between leisure, health and wellbeing and the aim of this edition was to offer a forum for overtly presenting these intersections. Here we set the scene for the papers in this special edition, summarizing the contribution of each paper to progressing discussions regarding the intersections of leisure and health and suggesting future directions for exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Committed to quality: the use of quality schemes in UK public leisure services
- Author
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Robinson, Leigh
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. Working Retirees? A Liberal Case for Retirement as Free Time
- Author
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Valente, Manuel Sá
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Intertemporal elasticity of substitution with leisure margin.
- Author
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Yagihashi, Takeshi and Du, Juan
- Subjects
ELASTICITY (Economics) ,LABOR supply ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,LEISURE ,TIME management - Abstract
This paper investigates households' consumption smoothing behavior by estimating the intertemporal elasticity of substitution of consumption (IES) while allowing labor/leisure to vary. To this end, we adopt a utility specification that allows non-separability between consumption and leisure. Using this specification, we define a leisure margin as the gap between the IES that allows leisure to vary and the IES that keeps leisure constant. We find a positive and statistically significant leisure margin throughout the paper. In addition, the leisure margin becomes larger when the spouse's leisure is taken into consideration. This result indicates that family labor supply plays an important role in households' consumption decisions. We further explore the heterogeneous nature of nonmarket time, and show that consumption-leisure substitutability could be explained largely by home production. Our findings demonstrate the importance of time allocation when individuals make decisions on consumption and saving. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. Women in leisure management: a survey of gender equity
- Author
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Aitchison, Cara, Jordan, Fiona, and Brackenridge, Celia
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Going shopping: key determinants of shopping behaviors and motivations
- Author
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Roy Dholakia, Ruby
- Published
- 1999
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- View/download PDF
100. Transforming the future: rethinking time for the new millennium
- Author
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Martin, Bill and Mason, Sandra
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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