Suche

Wo soll gesucht werden?
Erweiterte Literatursuche

Ariadne Pfad:

Inhalt

Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige

 
InstitutionGroßbritannien / Government; Großbritannien / Cabinet Office
TitelSporting Future.
First annual report.
Gefälligkeitsübersetzung: Zukunft des Sports. Erster Jahresbericht.
QuelleLondon (2017), 40 S.
PDF als Volltext  Link als defekt meldenVerfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttyponline; gedruckt; Monographie; Graue Literatur
SchlagwörterDatenerhebung; Umfrage; Erfolg; Gewalt; Sportstätte; Bewegungsmangel; Gesundheitspolitik; Steuerung; Gemeinde (Kommune); Nachhaltigkeit; Regierung; Homosexualität; Sexuelle Gewalt; Transsexualität; Doping; Leistungssport; Schulsport; Sport; Sportaktivität; Sportförderung; Sportorganisation; Sportpolitik; Sportveranstaltung; Sportökonomie; Finanzierung; Internationalität; Bekämpfung; Entwicklung; Freiwilligkeit; Kooperation; Missbrauch; Strategie; Bevölkerung; Behinderter
AbstractSporting Future set out a new government vision to redefine what success looks like in sport by concentrating on five key outcomes - physical wellbeing, mental wellbeing, individual development, social and community development and economic development. It was a bold new strategy for an active nation. It marked the biggest shift in Government policy on sport for more than a decade. One year on much has been achieved, and this report sets out the steps we have taken towards making sure absolutely everyone can benefit from the power of sport. Investment in sport and physical activity is now focused on the five key outcomes. Funding is being opened up to organisations who can demonstrate how they will consistently deliver some or all of those shared goals. Progress has been made against the three major outputs described in Sporting Future- engagement in sport as a participant, volunteer and spectator; maximising international and domestic sporting success and the impact of major events; and supporting a more productive, sustainable and responsible sport sector across the board. Government's role is to set the high level policy that guides how public money is invested rather than to make each and every funding decision. Sporting Future committed to a more joined-up approach from across government on this. Coordination is being strengthened by the Sport Cabinet, which brings together sports ministers from all four home nations. Local authorities also continue to have an important role to play in investing in sport and boosting participation, particularly among people who are not currently involved. Ten Sport England local delivery pilots will support local networks to deliver more active communities, and County Sport Partnerships are being transformed following an independent appraisal to help strengthen sport in communities right across the country. Engaging in sport as a participant, volunteer or spectator: Sporting Future set out to ensure that the whole population is encouraged and supported to engage in sport and physical activity in whatever way is best for them. Sport England's new strategy, Towards an Active Nation, follows the blueprint we set to tackle inactivity - where the gains for the individual and society are greatest. Sport England is now investing more in children's sport and physical activity outside school from the age of five rather than 14, to build strong foundations and positive attitudes from a young age. There is a strong emphasis on attracting under-represented groups such as women, disabled people, those in lower socio-economic groups and older people into sport, and a new £120 million fund to tackle inactivity. Separately, work has progressed on improving children's swimming and cycling skills; investment in school sport is being boosted and a review of the School Games has been completed. Progress is being tracked through the new Active Lives survey which captures more of the types of activity that people do, and their contribution to the outcomes of the strategy. Sport England has a new coaching plan and a new volunteering strategy backed by up to £26 million of funding. New standards for sport and exercise qualifications should be in place by June 2018. Maximising international and domestic sporting success and the impact of major events: Team GB enjoyed incredible Olympic and Paralympic success at Rio 2016, building on the amazing achievements of home Games in London 2012. To continue this momentum, the government has committed to funding our elite athletes in the run up to Tokyo in 2020. UK Sport and Sport England have published a Memorandum of Understanding on working together on talent development and have improved the Athletes Appearances programme so more people get to meet their heroes. As the UK looks forward to hosting a series of major international sporting events in 2017, including the World Athletics Championships, men's and women's Champions League finals in Cardiff, and cricket's ICC Champions Trophy and Women's World Cup, updated guidance on UK-level support available for major events known as the Gold Framework will be published shortly. To keep up the UK's reputation as the global home of major events, a framework has been developed by UK Sport with DCMS and the devolved administrations to secure more of the biggest events, which will be published shortly. Sport England has also launched a £1 million fund to support English bids for major events. Supporting a more productive, sustainable and responsible sport sector: UK Sport and Sport England are working with sports organisations to help them deliver the biggest possible impact from the public funding they receive. UK Sport and Sport England are also working with them to become less reliant on public funding, build more sustainable business models for the future and drive efficiencies. Corporation Tax relief for contributions to grassroots sports will be expanded from 1 April 2017, and other potential funding models including a Social Impact Fund and Social Impact Bonds are being explored. The terms of reference and membership of the new Sports Business Council will be announced shortly. Grassroots football will benefit from at least £100 million a year on investment from the Premier League - double the previous commitment. £40 million of government investment in the Parklife programme is providing state-of-the-art artificial pitches in 30 English towns and cities. Sport England is maximising the value of investment in facilities, and a new customer-facing quality standard for sports facilities will be established shortly. UK Anti-Doping's (UKAD)'s funding has been protected until 2020. As well as a review into the criminalisation of doping in sport, which is expected to be complete in Spring 2017, the government has launched a tailored review of UKAD to ensure it continues to lead in keeping sport clean. Sport England and UK Sport published a new Code for Sports Governance in October 2016, and we have been clear that organisations are expected to adhere to it if they want to receive public funding from April 2017. This government is committed to building a country that works for everyone, and increasing diversity in sport is particularly important. Leadership and diversity is being strengthened through Sport England's professional workforce strategy to be published later in 2017, and through requirements in the new governance code. Sport England and UK Sport's new single staff survey will collect data about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGB&T) people's representation on boards for the first time. UK Sport is exploring what more can be done to help women progress in elite coaching. Sport England is incentivising sports bodies to engage apprentices through funding agreements from April 2017 onwards. Safety and wellbeing are being addressed through Sport England's work with expert partners on LGB&T issues, and Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson's independent review into the Duty of Care sport has towards its participants will be published shortly. Furthermore, following allegations of non-recent child sexual abuse in football, sports governing bodies are reviewing their own safeguarding practices to make sure they are as robust as possible. Measuring the impact: The new Active Lives survey is already collecting data for many of the measures and KPIs in relation to adults and is being extended to do the same for children aged 5-15. Data available so far is set out in an annex to this report. (Autor).
Erfasst vonBundesinstitut für Sportwissenschaft, Bonn
Update2024/1
Literaturbeschaffung und Bestandsnachweise in Bibliotheken prüfen
 

Standortunabhängige Dienste
Da keine ISBN zur Verfügung steht, konnte leider kein (weiterer) URL generiert werden.
Bitte rufen Sie die Eingabemaske des Karlsruher Virtuellen Katalogs (KVK) auf
Dort haben Sie die Möglichkeit, in zahlreichen Bibliothekskatalogen selbst zu recherchieren.
Tipps zum Auffinden elektronischer Volltexte im Video-Tutorial

Trefferlisten Einstellungen

Permalink als QR-Code

Permalink als QR-Code

Inhalt auf sozialen Plattformen teilen (nur vorhanden, wenn Javascript eingeschaltet ist)

Teile diese Seite: