This book demonstrates how creative research methods can be used to better understand the experiences of children, particularly in the context of sport, physical activity, and health.
Extending recent developments in arts-based methods, mobile digital ethnographic methods, participatory visual methods, and autoethnography in research with children, the book focuses on British Chinese children - an often-neglected group in research studies - providing new perspectives on diversity and inclusion, innovative research methods, and the Chinese diaspora. The book draws on concepts from health and physical education, sport, sociology, cultural studies, and psycho-social studies to shed new light on social dynamics, cultural diversities, and contextual changes in British Chinese children's health related experiences. It shows how globalisation and international mobility has complicated diversity and difference in the Chinese diaspora, and how creative research methods and reflexivity can be powerful tools for unlocking our understanding of children's everyday lives.
This is fascinating and useful reading for any researcher or advanced student with an interest in innovative research methods, sport, physical activity, health, migration and diaspora studies, childhood and youth studies.
About the Author: Bonnie Pang is Associate Professor (Senior Lecturer) at the University of Bath, UK, and Adjunct Fellow at the Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, Australia. Her research focuses on members of the Chinese diaspora and contemporary issues and research methods related to diversity and inclusion in sport, physical activity, and health. Bonnie is an editorial board member of Sport, Education and Society, AIESEP Young Scholar, and Marie Sklodowska-Curie fellow (2019-20).