1. THE SEGREGATION BY PLAYING POSITION HYPOTHESIS IN SPORT: AN ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATION.
- Author
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McPherson, Barry D.
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS , *RACE discrimination , *BLACK people , *PROFESSIONAL sports , *SOCIALIZATION , *RACISM - Abstract
The article focuses on the racial segregation by playing position in sports. The paper suggests that involvement in specific sport roles by members of minority groups may be self-induced, rather than due to overt or subtle discrimination by white leaders within the sport system. The socialization process for individuals in minority groups appears to have a differential pattern and outcome. That is, differences in socializing agents, social structure and group-influenced personal traits and expectations exist and should be considered in any attempt to describe and explain black involvement in white social institutions such as sport. With their entrance into amateur and professional athletics, blacks were extremely successful in a wide variety of sports, especially baseball, basketball, boxing, football and track and field. Anthropologists, physical educators and psychologists, who compared blacks and whites on anthropometric and motor performance measures, generally concluded that there are few, if any, physical differences which could account for this supremacy. Alternatively, investigators have suggested that the success of the black in athletic competition is related to either environmental forces, cultural influences, or sociological and psychological differences.
- Published
- 1975