IWG Report GBV
In Canada, addressing harassment, abuse and discrimination in sport is a growing priority. However, this may not be the case in other countries. A study commissioned by the International Working Group on Women and Sport revealed that 37% of signatories to the Brighton Declaration on Women and Sport had not taken any action to address…
Creating a Safer Sport Environment with Ethics and Respect Training
This is the final blog of a 3-part series providing tools and resources to strengthen safety and ethical values in sport by introducing the Responsible Coaching Movement. If this is your first visit to this blog series, considering taking a few minutes to read the other two posts on Background Screening and the importance of…
Creating a Safer Sport Environment with Background Screening
This is the second installment of a 3-part blog series providing tools and resources to strengthen safety and ethical values in sport by introducing the Responsible Coaching Movement.  In Blog #1, we focused on the importance of the Rule of Two. In this installment, we’ll turn our attention to another key area of the Responsible…
Creating a Safer Sport Environment with the Rule of Two
This is the first installment of a 3-part blog series providing tools and resources to strengthen safety and ethical values in sport by introducing the Responsible Coaching Movement. If this is your first visit to this blog series, considering taking a few minutes to read subsequent blogs which focus on Background Screening and Ethics and Respect…
Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Changing? The Culture of Sport Hazing in the 21st Century-January 2018
Hazing is a complex issue that is entangled in the culture and tradition of Canadian University sport. Hazing is defined as an event created to establish a team’s social hierarchy by humiliating, degrading, abusing and/or endangering newcomers regardless of a person’s willingness to participate in order to reinforce their social status on the team. Anecdotal…