Capital Matters

How is social capital nurtured and made meaningful in the development of black student-athletes in historically white institutional (HWI) settings? Research explicitly exploring an understanding of nurturing social capital related to the development of black student-athletes is scarce. This collecti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Albert Y. Bimper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas Libraries 2016-06-01
Series:Journal of Intercollegiate Sport
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/jis/article/view/10097
Description
Summary:How is social capital nurtured and made meaningful in the development of black student-athletes in historically white institutional (HWI) settings? Research explicitly exploring an understanding of nurturing social capital related to the development of black student-athletes is scarce. This collective case study investigates black student-athletes’ accrual and meaning-making of social capital in historically white settings of higher education and intercollegiate athletics. The data analysis, guided by conceptual frames of social capital theory and critical race theory, revealed two emergent themes identified as 1) Connected with and through community and 2) Cultivating cross-cultural ties. Findings revealed similarities and nuanced differences in social capital realized by participants across two student-athlete development programs at different HWIs of higher education. Implications for intercollegiate student-athlete program designs and pedagogical implementations are discussed. Further implications from this research contribute to scholars’ deeper understandings of the contextualized sociocultural development of black intercollegiate student-athletes.
ISSN:1941-6342
1941-417X