Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League

In this article, we explore the relationship between public recreation policy and planning and the transformation of urban governance in the context of the Police Athletic League centers in Baltimore, Maryland. In light of contemporary discussions of the role of youth programs for sport and physical...

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Main Authors: Jacob J. Bustad, David L. Andrews
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2017-06-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/904
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spelling doaj-83f49b700f6549758f5b2d688e3d2d6f2020-11-24T22:48:08ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032017-06-015224124910.17645/si.v5i2.904522Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic LeagueJacob J. Bustad0David L. Andrews1Department of Kinesiology, Towson University, USADepartment of Kinesiology, University of Maryland, College Park, USAIn this article, we explore the relationship between public recreation policy and planning and the transformation of urban governance in the context of the Police Athletic League centers in Baltimore, Maryland. In light of contemporary discussions of the role of youth programs for sport and physical activity within post-industrial cities, the origination, development, and eventual demise of Baltimore’s network of Police Activity League centers is an instructive, if disheartening, saga. It illustrates the social and political rationales mobilized in justifying recreation policy and programming, the framing of sport and physical activity as preventative measures towards crime and juvenile delinquency, and the precarity of such initiatives given the efficiency-driven orthodoxies of neoliberal urban entrepreneurialism (Harvey, 1989). This analysis emphasizes how the PAL centers were designed to ‘fill the void’ left by a declining system of public recreation, thereby providing an example of a recreation program as part of the “social problems industry” (Pitter & Andrews 1997).https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/904neoliberalismpolicephysical activityrecreationsocial problems industrysporturban
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacob J. Bustad
David L. Andrews
spellingShingle Jacob J. Bustad
David L. Andrews
Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
Social Inclusion
neoliberalism
police
physical activity
recreation
social problems industry
sport
urban
author_facet Jacob J. Bustad
David L. Andrews
author_sort Jacob J. Bustad
title Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
title_short Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
title_full Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
title_fullStr Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
title_full_unstemmed Policing the Void: Recreation, Social Inclusion and the Baltimore Police Athletic League
title_sort policing the void: recreation, social inclusion and the baltimore police athletic league
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2017-06-01
description In this article, we explore the relationship between public recreation policy and planning and the transformation of urban governance in the context of the Police Athletic League centers in Baltimore, Maryland. In light of contemporary discussions of the role of youth programs for sport and physical activity within post-industrial cities, the origination, development, and eventual demise of Baltimore’s network of Police Activity League centers is an instructive, if disheartening, saga. It illustrates the social and political rationales mobilized in justifying recreation policy and programming, the framing of sport and physical activity as preventative measures towards crime and juvenile delinquency, and the precarity of such initiatives given the efficiency-driven orthodoxies of neoliberal urban entrepreneurialism (Harvey, 1989). This analysis emphasizes how the PAL centers were designed to ‘fill the void’ left by a declining system of public recreation, thereby providing an example of a recreation program as part of the “social problems industry” (Pitter & Andrews 1997).
topic neoliberalism
police
physical activity
recreation
social problems industry
sport
urban
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/904
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