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Sport and climate change: ‘bottom‑up’ manager perspectives of climate impacts, climate adaptation and implications for sport policy

スポーツと気候変動:ボトムアップのマネージャー視点による気候影響、適応、スポーツ政策への示唆 (AI 翻訳)

Greg Dingle, Anthony S. Kiem, Cheryl Mallen, Geoff Dickson

International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-06-25#政策Origin: Global
DOI: 10.1080/19406940.2026.2693276
原典: https://doi.org/10.1080/19406940.2026.2693276
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🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

オーストラリアのコミュニティスポーツを対象に、気候変動の影響と適応策に関するマネージャーの認識を調査。漸進的な適応しか行われておらず、変革的なスポーツ政策の必要性を示唆。

English

This mixed-methods study examines climate impacts on community sport in Australia. Managers perceive only incremental adaptation, revealing a policy void. Findings call for transformative sport policy to address climate hazards.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

オーストラリアの事例だが、日本の自治体スポーツ施設の気候リスク対応にも示唆。一貫した政策枠組みの欠如が共通課題。

In the global GX context

Highlights the policy gap for climate adaptation in community sport globally. Relevant for countries with decentralized sport systems and diverse climates, like Japan.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Empirical evidence on sport-climate policy nexus; supports need for transformative adaptation frameworks.

🏢実務担当者:Community sport managers can use findings to justify climate adaptation investments and policy advocacy.

🏛政策担当者:Suggests that one-size-fits-all policy fails; tailored, bottom-up approaches are needed for climate adaptation in sport.

📄 Abstract(原文)

Community sport is the foundation of sport systems, yet it faces a contemporary challenge: climate hazards and a diverse set of impacts associated with climate change. Sport policy research gives little guidance to policymakers about climate hazards or how to adapt to their impacts. The aim of this study is to examine managers’ perceptions of climate impacts on sport at a community level, how managers at this level interpret and respond to such impacts, and implications for sport policy. To address this research aim, a mixed‑methods research design was used. Qualitative data were collected through 23 in-depth interviews with managers from clubs and state sporting organisations for the sports of cricket, football, tennis and triathlon in Australia, and from local government managers of community sport facilities. Data themes and sub-themes were developed using reflexive thematic analysis. Quantitative data were collected using an online survey. From the qualitative data, five themes were developed: (1) a range of climate hazards disrupted sport; (2) perceived future climate risks; (3) multifaceted climate impacts on sport; (4) participant interpretations of climate hazards and climate change; (5) climate adaptation was incremental, not transformative. From the quantitative data, only incremental climate change adaptation was evident. A policy void was apparent. There is a role for sport policy to encourage community-level managers to become transformative climate change adaptation actors. One-size-fits-all sport policy appears inadequate for climate change adaptation in climatically diverse nations like Australia. The findings indicate a new frontier for sport policy and sport policy research.

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