Led by staff from the University’s School of Sport, Exercise, and Health Sciences, the project will see researchers from both institutions create sport policy guides for organisations in Brazil.
This will include research into organisational planning, safeguarding and inclusion for participants.
Initial investigations on more than 2,000 municipalities – which govern 36 per cent of the 212 million people in Brazil – found significant problems. These include:
- Almost 70 per cent of Brazilian districts do not have basic planning documents for sports policies
- Nearly 80 per cent of local public sports departments do not implement programmes for people with disabilities
- Even in districts with sport policies, over 70 per cent are not evaluated
The new partnership will create guidelines and advice to create effective sport policies.
Dr Joe Piggin, Senior Lecturer in Sport Policy at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, said: “Sport policy can help increase opportunities to participate, promote athlete welfare, and lead to more fulfilling and enjoyable lives.
“This only happens when there are effective systems for both managers and participants to engage with. With a population of over 200 million people in Brazil, there is enormous potential to help people play sport and live actively.”
Fernando Mezzadri, Professor at the Federal University of Paraná, said: “It is an honour for the IPIE to collaborate with º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ in this project, which is part of the second phase of the investigation that we have been carrying out in Brazil. We have already gathered data from more than 2000 municipalities in 16 states in the country, and we aim to join forces with the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ team to develop a programme that can harness our sports sector.”
Sabrina Furtado, collaboration leader at the Federal University of Paraná, added: “We are really excited about this collaborative project that aims to strengthen the public policies for sports at local levels in Brazil. Bringing together all the data we have from Brazil with º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ’s professional and academic knowledge is an important step to bring solutions and new expertise to this area in our country.”
The º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ academics involved in the research include Dr Joe Piggin, Dr Susana Monserrat-Revillo, Dr Serhat Yilmaz, Dr Doyoung Pyun, Dr Borja García, and Dr David O’Byrne.
The project will run for three years, with potential for longitudinal monitoring and evaluation to be developed.
For more information on the Sports Intelligence Research Institute (IPIE), visit its dedicated website here: http://www.inteligenciaesportiva.ufpr.br/site/.