ABSTRACT
This paper uses an autoethnography to recount my experiences with SportHelp, a UK youth sports charity. Using a layered account format, which jumps through time and space, I demonstrate the extent to which neoliberal values have influenced the continuity and change of SportHelp. This paper does not constitute an attack on the charity, its staff, nor the charity sector. The focus is on how the wider neoliberal context shapes how SportHelp operates. The findings are analysed in terms of Foucault’s (2008, The birth of biopolitics. Lectures at the Collége de France, 1978–79. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan) notion of governmentality by examining SportHelp’s monitoring and reporting practices, as well as the managers’ use of New Public Management discourse. The conclusion reflects on the extent to which neoliberal governmentality, though in some instances beneficial for SportHelp, ultimately does more harm than good. This paper, by offering an ‘insider’s view’, adds to the literature calling for a change in how policy makers and funders shape the current hypercompetitive socio-political landscape. Charities should be supported, not discouraged, to develop holistic programmes that move beyond ‘economic rationales’ and are capable of addressing the multifaceted needs of their service users.
Acknowledgements
This paper would not exist without the expertise and guidance of Dr Ant Bush, stimulating conversations on youth sport with Dr Haydn Morgan, or Dr Aurelien Mondon’s comments on an early draft. Equally, we are deeply thankful to SportHelp’s staff for their time and willingness to share their experiences.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 To protect the anonymity of the charity, I have not disclosed all the elements in the framework.