1. Stacking in Professional American Football: Implications from the Canadian Game.
- Author
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Stebbins, Robert A.
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS , *SOCIAL sciences , *FOOTBALL , *SOCIOLOGY , *BALL games - Abstract
Stacking, a form of ethnic segregation peculiar to the world of team sport, is alive and well in the 1990s more than twenty years after its scientific discovery in 1970. Although it has become one of the most widely studied topics in the sociology of American sport, crosscultural data are still extremely rare. Two quantitative comparisons of this nature were made of Canadian and American football in the 1950s and 1960s which, however, are now rather dated and which lack player views on stacking. A new comparison is presented based on qualitative data gathered in 1983 and 1984. It demonstrates that there are dramatically different stacking practices in Canada, practices with implications that pertain to stacking of all kinds and to stacking in internationally expanding American team sport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
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