Abstract
Sport exists in tension, and Sport for Development (SfD) operates within this friction: while it seeks to use sport as a context-specific tool for social change, it often remains bound by institutional logic, external funding, and predefined resilience-building models for aid.
For those developing tools and methods to foster participation through design interventions and digital storytelling workshops, this tension is not just an analytical concern but a methodological challenge, especially in climate-displaced communities. How can we navigate sport’s structures while opening space for capacity building and alternative storytelling?
Our ongoing research explores how sports actions can be hacked and redesigned, opening spaces where communities critically engage with their pasts and futures beyond imposed scripts. Through participatory digital storytelling and co-design, we are working with young people in Bangladesh, Jordan, and Fiji to examine how traditional and formal activities are repurposed—through movement, play, and team experimentation— to foster adaptive agency, while story-making agency allows participants to construct new narratives beyond resilience frameworks.
Instead of delivering structured solutions, we use sport as a site of trialling, where rules are rewritten, adaptive strategies playtested, and capacities built collectively. By embracing the productive frictions within SfD and unpacking their complexities through storytelling and co-design, this paper explores the following questions: when does sport enable agency, and when does it impose limits? How can we genuinely pass the ball to the players, shifting Sports models to a hacked sports system for critical speculation and climate-adaptive agency?
For those developing tools and methods to foster participation through design interventions and digital storytelling workshops, this tension is not just an analytical concern but a methodological challenge, especially in climate-displaced communities. How can we navigate sport’s structures while opening space for capacity building and alternative storytelling?
Our ongoing research explores how sports actions can be hacked and redesigned, opening spaces where communities critically engage with their pasts and futures beyond imposed scripts. Through participatory digital storytelling and co-design, we are working with young people in Bangladesh, Jordan, and Fiji to examine how traditional and formal activities are repurposed—through movement, play, and team experimentation— to foster adaptive agency, while story-making agency allows participants to construct new narratives beyond resilience frameworks.
Instead of delivering structured solutions, we use sport as a site of trialling, where rules are rewritten, adaptive strategies playtested, and capacities built collectively. By embracing the productive frictions within SfD and unpacking their complexities through storytelling and co-design, this paper explores the following questions: when does sport enable agency, and when does it impose limits? How can we genuinely pass the ball to the players, shifting Sports models to a hacked sports system for critical speculation and climate-adaptive agency?
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publication status | Published - 5 Jun 2025 |
| Event | INSA 2025 Conference: Sport: Beyond Definitions - KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium Duration: 5 Jun 2025 → 6 Jun 2025 https://www.sportanthro.org/conference/ |
Conference
| Conference | INSA 2025 Conference |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | Belgium |
| City | Leuven, |
| Period | 5/06/25 → 6/06/25 |
| Internet address |