Social integration of people with a migration background in Swiss sport clubs: A cross-level analysis
Version
Published
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Buser, Matthias
Adler Zwahlen, Jenny
Schlesinger, Torsten
Nagel, Siegfried
Type
Article
Language
English
Subjects
Abstract
Sport clubs are considered an ideal setting for the social integration of people with a migration background (PMB). However, they can also be a place of social closure practices, where assimilative ideas and ethnic boundaries are present. Besides the individual characteristics of the members, adequate club organizational structures are relevant for preventing social closure and facilitating social integration. Thus, the role of organizational structures for social integration might differ between natives and PMB. Based on data from 42 Swiss sport clubs and 780 sport club members, with and without a migration background, we analyzed individual (migration background, membership biography) and structural factors (situational, club goals, club culture) using multilevel models and tested cross-level interactions between structural variables and migration background. The results reveal that membership biography (e.g. membership duration and volunteering) and migration background are relevant for social integration. The estimated cross-level effects reveal that, unlike for natives and second-generation PMB, structural conditions are especially relevant for first-generation PMB. For example, social integration increases with a higher proportion of PMB in the club or a less assimilative club culture.
Publisher DOI
Journal
International Review for the Sociology of Sport
ISSN
1012-6902
Organization
Volume
57
Issue
4
Publisher
SAGE journals
Submitter
ServiceAccount
Citation apa
Buser, M., Adler Zwahlen, J., Schlesinger, T., & Nagel, S. (2021). Social integration of people with a migration background in Swiss sport clubs: A cross-level analysis. In International Review for the Sociology of Sport (Vol. 57, Issue 4). SAGE journals. https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/42805
