There was a massive meltdown over the boys netball team that won the recent tournament. Many commentators worried that women might twist an ankle or break a leg if they were to play mixed sports, when in fact, the consequences of segregation are much, much more costly to women. Image
Social politics have hugely affected women’s sporting performance over the last century — but what if sports could affect change in social politics?
All-male sports teams exist largely within a system run by men who went through the system themselves — men who end up as coaches, officials, and members of boards.
It’s a system that teaches men that a version of masculinity, that is both toxic and hierarchical, is among the most important traits to have.
Eric Anderson, professor of sports, masculinities, and sexualities at the University of Winchester, defines this as “orthodox masculinity” in a 2008 study. He argues that it’s responsible for men’s team sports cultivating a culture of misogynistic and homophobic attitudes.
“It is a resilient system that reproduces a more conservative form of gender expression among men, helping make sport a more powerful gender regime,” he explains.
Ultimately, an athlete’s own choices matter less and less, as they’re encouraged to see everyone else through the lens of orthodox masculinity.
More often than not, men who play to a high level in an all-male sports team also socialize mainly with their teammates, meaning that the bonds they form with people outside of that sporting universe & especially women  are colored by the masculinity they have to live every day.
This means there is a higher chance of men having negative attitudes about women  objectifying them, for example.
Anderson explains: “Male athletes (in general) and team sport athletes (in particular) have been shown to objectify women — often viewing them as sexual objects to be conquered.”
The statistics on campus rape in America are pretty terrifying; a three-year study by researchers Jeff Benedict and Todd Crosset in the mid-1990s showed that ..
while male student-athletes comprise 3.3 percent of student populations in the United States., they made up 19 percent of sexual assault perpetrators and 35 percent of domestic violence perpetrators.
Integrating team sports could do a significant amount to change this. In his study, Anderson followed heterosexual male university cheerleaders, who had all previously played high school football.
Before they started cheerleading almost all of them reported that they viewed the world through the prism of orthodox masculinity — they held misogynistic views, both about women as athletes, and also in a more general sense.
Overwhelmingly, the men who participated in sports with women had their minds changed. They perceived women as good athletes; strong, capable and skillful. David, one participant in Anderson’s study, said: “I used to think women were weak, but now I know that’s not true.
I never thought women were so athletic before. I hated women’s sports. But these women are athletes. They do stuff I’d never be able to do and I bet there are a lot of sports women can do better in.”
It didn’t stop there. “All but a handful reported that they had learned to see women as more than sex objects,” Anderson explains. “All the athletes reported having learned to respect and value women as friends, teammates, and competent leaders.
Thus in the sex-integrated sport of collegiate cheerleading, once sexist and misogynistic men were able to witness the athleticism of women, befriend them in ways that they were previously unable to, and to learn of their gendered narratives, it humanized them in the process.”
Segregation in sports, it turns out, is harmful to gender relations and society. We worry that women might twist an ankle or break a leg if they were to play mixed sports, when in fact, the consequences of segregation are much, much more costly to women.
I hope that one day Betts will play on the same team as Phillips; that we will see more integration of team sports, and humanity will be better for it. ImageImage

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More from @KirstiMiller30

28 Sep
@simonahac @ScottMorrisonMP @Barnaby_Joyce We have a dysfunctional hung 2-party-preferred system in 🇦🇺 politics that isn’t working for people, & it sure isn’t working for the planet. My collapse of faith in our democracies isn’t an accident. It’s one of the central victories of the neoliberal project, delivered through..
@simonahac @ScottMorrisonMP @Barnaby_Joyce two generations of privatisation, outsourcing and deregulation, underfunding of gov services locked in by tax cuts, restricting FOI, targeting whistleblowers and raiding the media who report on them, delegitimising and gagging public interest advocacy, and criminalising protest.
@simonahac @ScottMorrisonMP @Barnaby_Joyce Politics in Australia today relies hugely on the fact that most people don’t know most of what’s going on so as to get away with stuff that couldn’t be done under real scrutiny we have seen a clear example of this with the National Coronvirus Cabinet.
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27 Sep
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women are 21.2 times more likely to be imprisoned than non-Indigenous women.
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Research has found a large portion of prisoners in 🇦🇺 come from & return to a ’small’ number of inadequately resourced neighbourhoods & communities.

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Australia cannot afford the social, health and economic costs of over-imprisonment of Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Australians.Strong, healthy & connected communities are the most effective way to prevent crime & make communities safer.
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26 Sep
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Most of the anti-sentiment against transgender athletes of course largely comes from a place of wanting to protect the integrity of women’s sport, rather than simple hatred and bigotry.
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Prominent media personalities such as Piers Morgan, Ben Shapiro and Joe Rogan, as well as many former athletes like Sharron Davies, Dame Kelly Holmes, Tessa Sanderson, Martina Navratilova and Paula Radcliffe have all been outspoken in their opposition towards trans athletes.
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My gorgeous daughter has started her steps in honour of Katelyn her perfect angel in the sky💜💜

If you would like to make a donation to this worthy case to help raise funds to support bereaved families please click on her fundraising page💜 walkyourway.choosinghope.com.au/page/JessicaMi…
From now and during the month of October, she will@dedicate every step in honour of Katelyn and help raise important funds in support of bereaved families. She has set myself a goal to walk 35km and beyond, as Katelyn was born sleeping at 35weeks.
Jessica would like to help make a difference by fundraising for Bears Of Hope Pregnancy & Infant Loss Support. This is a cause close to her heart, who help support parents across Australia who experience the loss of their baby through miscarriage, stillbirth, neonatal and
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