Report highlights trajectory challenges for women in elite football
2024-06-14
(Press-News.org)
Report highlights trajectory challenges for women in elite football
A new report commissioned by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) and Fédération Internationale des Associations de Footballeurs Professionnels (FIFPRO), undertaken by Edith Cowan University (ECU), surveyed footballers across 12 countries in six confederations. More than 700 players participated in the survey, with 71.5% classifying themselves as professional, with a further 16.8% classifying themselves as semi-professional.
Less than half of the surveyed elite women players (“footballers” or “players”) are making sufficient income from the sport to cover their football-related expenses. While 67% of the surveyed players currently earned a substantial portion of their total annual income from playing football, most of the respondent’s incomes were sourced from a second or even third job.
Surveyed players in the US, Australia and England report earning a greater absolute income from their efforts on the field, compared with their counterparts in Brazil, the Republic of Korea, Fiji, New Zealand, or Chile, however, the context to individual country average annual income becomes critical. For example, 73.3% of the Australian respondents noted that their expenses related to football was greater than their current football income.
In Australia, 78% of the professional footballers that took part in the survey held a job in addition to playing football, with only 2% of players earning at peak, between $40,000 and $49,999 annually from the game. Australia’s average annual income is currently $60,430.
“We are so proud of all the progress that has been made for women in sport. And while we should celebrate the successes, we have to remember that that progress is not occurring equally across the world,” said ECU Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Sport) and Professor of Human Performance, Sophia Nimphius.
Women’s football is unequally developed around the world, with the degree of professionalisation, facilities, opportunities and access to the game varying from location to location, meaning the opportunity to earn an income from the game is also contingent on location.
“Some of the countries of players surveyed have vastly different gender equality index rankings, as measured by the World Economic Forum, that can influence broader conditions due to higher gender wage gaps and greater unpaid care work,” said Professor Nimphius.
“It is important to acknowledge that there are demands on players beyond football, and that when these are layered upon varying provisions within football, it compounds the effect and we are losing talent and losing the opportunity to create hotbeds of not just football talent, but also for strong women, active women that could be future leaders beyond sport.”
Professor Nimphius noted that football could be viewed as a microcosm of society, reflecting the work that needs to be done in order to bridge a very visible gender gap that exists within the larger society.
“The World Economic Forum predicts it will take another 132 years to for the global gender gap to close, but since sport is a microcosm, we have the opportunity to bridge this gap faster. Sport should offer an opportunity for people to express themselves, and elite sport benefits most from the largest base possible of people participating. For that to happen, people need to feel like they belong and are supported to participate.
“That is why inadequate pay is a common talking point, because it is easy to pinpoint. But it is indicative of a bigger story of gender inequality that lies underneath,” said Professor Nimphius.
The report makes a number of recommendations to support women football players, including adjusting for the workload of multiple job holders and taking a two-pronged approach to football careers in relation to resourcing and management.
“We need to acknowledge that the solutions in each country will be different, but that the outcome should be the same. Which is to provide opportunities that enable any girl or woman to maximize her capabilities as a footballer, as a person, and that you do so in the context of the nation that you're in,” said Professor Nimphius.
“We also need to consider the individual player holistically, considering their duties outside of football and finding a way of balancing their careers and commitments both on and off the field. What we would do here in Australia may look totally different to what we might do in Fiji, but ultimately women should be supported to have the opportunity to play their best football and to live a positive life within their community, and that includes having financial security, as well as respect and recognition and safety within their community while they're playing football.”
Changes are already happening following discussions with many key stakeholders such as FIFPRO and player unions, as FIFA announced regulatory changes commencing 1 June 2024, aimed to further protect the health and well-being of women in the game.
- ends -
Media contact: Esmarie Iannucci, 08 6304 3080 or 0405 774 465
e.iannucci@ecu.edu.au
Journalists can subscribe to get the latest research news delivered to your inbox.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-06-14
Men are often urged to talk about their mental health with friends, but what does that involve?
This week, researchers from the Men’s Health Research Program at UBC introduced In Good Company, a website and podcast series aimed at answering precisely that question. The website provides practical advice for men seeking to make new connections, strengthen existing relationships and provide mutual support. The podcast series interviews men’s health experts and psychologists to explore the nuances and benefits of authentic male connection. Both ...
2024-06-14
Excess sodium intake and a lack of potassium are major contributing factors towards high blood pressure in Indonesia, prompting calls for low-sodium potassium-rich salt substitutes (LSSS) to be readily available to improve health and curb health costs.
New Griffith University research has looked at the impact of switching out current table salt (100 per cent sodium chloride) with a low-sodium alternative in Indonesia.
Lead author Dr Leopold Aminde from the School of Medicine and Dentistry said the World Health Organisation has recommended a population-wide reduction in sodium consumption to tackle the burden of high blood pressure and ...
2024-06-14
Background
High-temperature fusion plasma experiments conducted in the Large Helical Device (LHD) of the National Institute for Fusion Science (NIFS), have renewed the world record for an acquired data amount, 0.92 terabytes (TB) per experiment, in February 2022, by using a full range of state-of-the-art plasma diagnostic devices*1. The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), which is currently under construction in France through the international collaboration of seven parties, is expected to generate ...
2024-06-14
EMBARGOED for release until 1pm U.S. Central Time (2pm Eastern) on June 13, 2024
HOUSTON – (June 13, 2024) – Solar power is not only the fastest growing energy technology in recent history but also one of the cheapest energy sources and the most impactful in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
A Rice University study featured on the cover of today’s issue of Science describes a way to synthesize formamidinium lead iodide (FAPbI3) ⎯ the type of crystal currently used to make the highest-efficiency perovskite solar cells ⎯ into ultrastable, high-quality photovoltaic films. The overall efficiency of the resulting ...
2024-06-14
A group of researchers from the University of Tartu and international scientists discovered new mechanisms of how stroke occurs by studying changes in mouse and human cells. The study lays the foundation for new, more precise treatment methods and better diagnostics, which could improve cardiovascular health in the future.
One of the authors of the study, a PhD student of Faculty of Medicine of University of Tartu Katyayani Sukhavasi said that affecting people of all ages, every fifth minute, someone suffers a stroke resulting in brain bleeding or ischemia. „Consequently, many people die ...
2024-06-14
Long term thinking and stable, consistent policies are key to improving our nation’s financial prosperity and wellbeing, say experts on The BMJ Commission on the Future of the NHS as they set out their manifesto for a healthier UK.
The BMJ Commission brings together leading experts from medicine and healthcare to identify the key challenges and priorities and make recommendations aimed at ensuring that the vision of the NHS is realised.
Their key pledges of what they would do if they were in government are:
Reaffirming ...
2024-06-14
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- An international team led by researchers at the University of California, Riverside, has made a significant breakthrough in how to enable and exploit ultra-fast spin behavior in ferromagnets. The research, published in Physical Review Letters and highlighted as an editors’ suggestion, paves the way for ultra-high frequency applications.
Today’s smartphones and computers operate at gigahertz frequencies, a measure of how fast they operate, with scientists working to make them even faster. The new research has found a way to achieve terahertz frequencies using conventional ferromagnets, which ...
2024-06-14
A new report offers lessons for post-pandemic transit policy and planning. Notably, it calls for planners to downplay the role of offices in transit station areas and increase the opportunity for people to live in them. Researchers Arthur C. Nelson and Robert Hibberd published "Transit Station Area Development and Demographic Outcomes (PDF)," updating their longitudinal analysis of the impacts of development near transit stations.
The new report includes a foreword by U.S. Congressman Earl Blumenauer. An excerpt reads:
"In this report, Arthur ...
2024-06-13
New York, NY [June 13, 2024]—Deploying and evaluating a machine learning intervention to improve clinical care and patient outcomes is a key step in moving clinical deterioration models from byte to bedside, according to a June 13 editorial in Critical Care Medicine that comments on a Mount Sinai study published in the same issue. The main study found that hospitalized patients were 43 percent more likely to have their care escalated and significantly less likely to die if their care team received AI-generated alerts signaling adverse changes in their health. ...
2024-06-13
COLLEGE PARK, Md. – The University of Maryland School of Public Health, together with Bowie State University, is expanding its study abroad options for marginalized faculty and students and for students who are Pell Grant recipients, in part due to a grant announced June 13 from the U.S. State Department. The schools were among a select 37 institutions nationwide to receive this 2024 grant.
The award will connect underrepresented faculty and students from both universities with opportunities to study global public health in Rwanda, focusing on countering violent extremism, prevention of emerging tropical infectious diseases, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Report highlights trajectory challenges for women in elite football