Since 1990, Britain has seen a period of unprecedented public
investment in, and political commitment to, sport. In this book,
Iain Lindsey and Barrie Houlihan examine and analyze sport policy
since the appointment of John Major as leader of the Conservative
Party in 1990.
John Major s period as Prime Minister was a watershed in British
sport policy marking the beginning of a prolonged period of public
and lottery investment and relatively high political salience. The
text also locates Labour sport policy not only in relation to the
previous government of John Major, but also in relation to the
Labor government s broader concerns and ambitions related to
modernization of British institutions, its ambition to tackle the
wicked issues epitomized by its focus on achieving greater social
inclusion, and its interest in facilitating greater stakeholder
involvement in the policy process.
Lindsey and Houlihan provide the first analysis that examines
sport policy as a field of government and that discusses how the
various sectors (e.g. youth/school sport, mass sport, etc.) have
been affected by government policy and the competition for public
resources.
General
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