Abstract
While sports research has begun to focus on gendered violence in different disciplines, a need exists for deeper analysis of sexual harassment and abuse in sports. Based on responses to a large online survey, our study adds valuable insights to the examination of harassment in martial arts and to the development of solutions against it. Our investigation reveals a prevalence of gendered harassment in martial arts, a tendency to minimize the possibility of harassment being fostered in training spaces, and an inclination to individualize harassment as an issue of ego instead of perceiving it as a systemic form of oppression.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
