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Review Article

Challenging the new orthodoxy: a critique of SPLISS and variable-oriented approaches to comparing sporting nations

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Pages 520-536 | Received 10 Aug 2019, Accepted 17 Jan 2020, Published online: 28 Jan 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Research Question: In recent years the comparative sport policy field has become dominated by the ‘SPLISS’ approach developed by De Bosscher and colleagues. While this approach has developed important insights into the statistical relationship between key groups of independent variables and indicators of elite sport policy success, nevertheless its attempts to identify and explain both statistical association and causal relationships have significant limitations.

The paper thus seeks to address the question of the nature of such strengths and limitations and their implications for theory, policy and practice.

Methods: As a review paper it develops a critical evaluation of claims made for the SPLISS approach to variable oriented comparative policy analysis.

Results: The paper identifies and focuses on the implications of six key problems for the SPLISS approach, namely: philosophical assumptions and causal variables; the black box problem; internal validity issues; non-equivalence and reliability; the neglect of agency; and misconceptions in the use of mixed methods.

Implications: The paper’s findings represent a challenge to the hegemony of this variable-oriented approach and they argue not for replacement or rejection of such an approach, but for recognition of its limitations, and of the opportunities for complementing it with case-driven, qualitative analysis generating causal accounts of policy outcomes.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 While Pawson’s position is realist he rejects the critical theory stance implied in Bhaskar’s critical realism (Archer et al., Citation1998) opting instead for what he terms a ‘middle range realism’ (Pawson, Citation2006, 19–20; Pawson, Citation2009).

2 Medals for shooting, for example, may be less valued in some countries than medals in track and field athletics, though some countries such as Kuwait and Malta clearly value success in shooting highly, since shooting sports are central to the sporting cultures of those countries.

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