15 research outputs found
âI Think I Became a Swimmer Rather than Just Someone with a Disability Swimming Up and Downâ: Paralympic Athletes Perceptions of Self and Identity Development
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Disability and Rehabilitation on 27 September 2016, available online at:DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2016.1217074.Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the role of swimming on Paralympic athletesâ perceptions of self and identity development. Method: A hermeneutic phenomenological approach was taken. During semi-structured interviews five Paralympic swimmers (aged 20-24 years) were asked questions about their swimming career, perceptions of self, integration, and impairment. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Results: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis1 yielded three superordinate themes: a) âOne of the crowdâ; none of the participants viewed themselves as disabled, nor as supercrips; these perceptions stemmed from family-, school-, and swimming- related experiences, b) âBecoming meâ; participation in swimming facilitated self- and social-acceptance, and identity development, and c) âA badge of honourâ; swimming presented opportunity to present and reinforce a positive identity. Conclusions: Swimming experiences enabled the participants to enhance personal and social identities, integrate through pro-social mechanisms, and to develop a career path following retirement from competition.through pro-social mechanisms, and to develop a career path following retirement from competition.Peer reviewe
Distance decay function in criminal behavior: a case of Israel
Interurban income disparities, Crime rates, Spatial proximity, O15, R10, R15,
Is Gun Violence Contagious? A Spatiotemporal Test
Existing theories of gun violence predict stable spatial concentrations and contagious diffusion of gun violence
into surrounding areas. Recent empirical studies have reported confirmatory evidence of such spatiotemporal diffusion
of gun violence. However, existing space/time interaction tests cannot readily distinguish spatiotemporal
clustering from spatiotemporal diffusion. This leaves as an open question whether gun violence actually is contagious
or merely clusters in space and time. Compounding this problem, gun violence is subject to considerable
measurement error with many nonfatal shootings going unreported to police. Using point process data from an
acoustical gunshot locator system and a combination of Bayesian spatiotemporal point process modeling and classical
space/time interaction tests, this paper demonstrates that contemporary urban gun violence in a metropolitan
city does diffuse in space and time, but only slightly, suggesting that a disease model for the spread of gun violence
in space and time may not be a good fit for most of the geographically stable and temporally stochastic
process observed