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Journal articles on the topic 'Skateboarding'

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1

Glenney, Brian, and Steve Mull. "Skateboarding and the Ecology of Urban Space." Journal of Sport and Social Issues 42, no. 6 (September 25, 2018): 437–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0193723518800525.

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Skateboarding poses a unique case study for considering the place of sport in human activity. The bulk of skateboarding scholarship argues that skateboarding is largely a subversion of rule governance, a view difficult to square with common and popular rule-governed skateboarding competitions, now including the Olympics. We attempt to resolve this tension by arguing for a kind of pluralism: skateboarding’s engagement in rule-governed competition is distinctly subversive, yielding the claim that skateboarding is both sport and subversion. This pluralism is examined in an “ecological” framework of emergent activities defined by push-pull interactive relationships between skateboarders and their environment that change the meaning of their spaces—whether domestic, urban, or competitive—to spaces that are both wild and spontaneous. We conclude with reflections on how skateboarding provides understanding of sport in the space of ecological meaning.
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Williams, Neftalie. "Before the Gold: Connecting Aspirations, Activism, and BIPOC Excellence Through Olympic Skateboarding." Journal of Olympic Studies 3, no. 1 (May 1, 2022): 4–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/26396025.3.1.02.

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Abstract Although scholars have focused on the racial politics of popular and Olympic sports (particularly in the US context), few have addressed issues of race in action sports like skateboarding. Those who do consider race in elite skateboarding broadly frame skaters of color (SOC) as “tokens” with little to no agency. Furthermore, the scholarly literature theorizes skateboarding culture as a space of whiteness, with a limited capacity to act as a contested site of racial politics and fails to include and consider the voices and experiences of elite SOC. This article's interviews with SOC offer firsthand accounts and analysis of the racial politics encountered by elite SOC from the 2020–2021 US Olympic team ahead of skateboarding's Olympic debut in Tokyo. Informed by the activism of critical race theory (CRT), this article gives voice to the previously voiceless. Privileging the stories of elite SOC at the formation or nexus of Olympic skateboarding, the Black Lives Matter Movement (BLM), and rising Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) violence, this research clarifies how elite US Olympic SOC contest racism and stereotypes while navigating “otherness” and “double consciousness” in their role as historic spokespeople for skateboarding, their families, and US communities of color.
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Atencio, Matthew, Becky Beal, and Emily Chivers Yochim. "“It Ain’t Just Black Kids and White Kids”: The Representation and Reproduction of Authentic “Skurban” Masculinities." Sociology of Sport Journal 30, no. 2 (June 2013): 153–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ssj.30.2.153.

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The recent emergence of “skurban” (the fusion of skateboarding and urban) reflects the racially diverse history and culture of skateboarding within urban areas in the United States. Skurban follows on from skateboarding’s integral link with the urban since the 1980s. We aver that urban skateboarding is now underpinned by proliferating racial formations that reproduce a version of masculine authenticity that is highly marketable. Through our interrogation of two mainstream media skate videos featuring Stevie Williams and Paul Rodriguez, we propose that skurban reflects the ascendancy of highly valued urban racial masculinities. These masculinities enhance youth and action sport brand marketing strategies. Simultaneously, these diverse racial masculinities gain currency in alignment with discourses of individual entrepreneurialism, “free market” capitalism, and multicultural notions of diversity.
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Wynn, Jonathan. "Skateboarding LA: Inside Professional Street Skateboarding." Social Forces 97, no. 1 (June 26, 2018): e13-e13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sf/soy069.

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5

Beal, Becky. "Skateboarding LA: Inside Professional Street Skateboarding." Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 48, no. 3 (May 2019): 352–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094306119842138pp.

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6

Fountain, Jodi L., and Michael C. Meyers. "Skateboarding Injuries." Sports Medicine 22, no. 6 (December 1996): 360–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00007256-199622060-00004.

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7

MacKay, Steph, and Christine Dallaire. "Skateboarding Women." Journal of Sport and Social Issues 38, no. 6 (December 16, 2012): 548–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0193723512467357.

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8

Atencio, Matthew. "Snyder, Gregory, Skateboarding LA: Inside Professional Street Skateboarding." Canadian Journal of Sociology 43, no. 2 (June 30, 2018): 215–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.29173/cjs29468.

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9

Putra, Dian Mega, and Desriyeni Desriyeni. "Pembuatan Direktori Lokasi Bermain Skateboarding di Sumatera Barat." Ilmu Informasi Perpustakaan dan Kearsipan 8, no. 1 (October 29, 2019): 82. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/107299-0934.

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AbstractWriting this paper aims to create a directory of locations for skateboarding in West Sumatra. The method used in this paper is descriptive research, which examines a group of people, an object, a condition, a thought, or a class of events in the present. Data collection is done by observation, interview, and literature study. Based on data analysis, it can be concluded as follows. First, the obstacles in making a skateboarding directory location in West Sumatra can be described as follows. (a) the writer has difficulty finding a clear place about the location of skateboarding. These constraints are due to the absence of a clear pointer or direction to a skateboarding location. (b) the distance from the downtown or downtown. These constraints are due to inadequate access to locations. The author must ask and explain to the surrounding community in detail in a location in order to get to the point where to skateboard. (c), the authors find it difficult to find the right sources for more detailed information on a skateboarding location. The existence of these obstacles is due to ignorance of the community and skateboarding community about the place. The author only gets some clear information when making observations. Second, the author's attempt to do so is as follows. (a) the author does his best to make clear road and road directions to a skateboarding location with the help of the surrounding community and the communities in the place. With the help of the community and community in making instructions at a predetermined point or better known by the community. (b) the author tries to minimize the distance to the location of skateboarding by asking the informant or the right informant at a skateboarding location. (c) the author tries his best to do interviews with several people to get clear and precise information about a skateboarding location. The resource person can come from the community itself or the community around the location.Keywords: directory, skateboarding, West Sumatera
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10

Rodríguez-Rivadulla, Adrián, Miguel Ángel Saavedra-García, and Rafael Arriaza-Loureda. "Skateboarding Injuries in Spain: A Web-Based Survey Approach." Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine 8, no. 3 (March 1, 2020): 232596711988490. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967119884907.

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Background: The inclusion of skateboarding in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games reinforces this activity as a sport. As the number of skateboarders around the world and the difficulty of skateboarding maneuvers continue to increase, the number of skateboarding injuries may also rise. Thus, there is a need for more comprehensive investigations into the practice habits and injuries of skateboarders. Purpose: To describe the sports habits and skateboarding injuries of a sample of skateboarders in Spain. Study Design: Descriptive epidemiology study. Methods: A web-based survey was shared among skateboarders in Spain. The survey collected data related to sports habits, skateboarding practice habits, and injury history. Comparisons between subgroups of sex, age, and experience were also conducted. Results: The survey was completed by 197 participants (89.3% male) with a mean age of 24.4 ± 7.1 years and a mean experience of 9.7 ± 7.2 years. Most respondents (87.8%) reported not participating in any type of skateboarding-specific physical training program. Only 27.4% took part in skateboarding competitions, with a larger number of respondents younger than 18 years participating in competitive events. The mean number of sessions per week was 3.3 ± 1.7, and the mean length of sessions was 3.3 ± 1.5 hours. The majority of participants (87.8%) reported having suffered injuries (n = 323) as a result of skateboarding, mainly affecting the lower limbs (69.7%). The most common injury type was a ligament sprain (39.6%), especially of the ankle (39.3%). This injury was also reported as the most likely to recur (70.1%). A large number of injuries (54.2%) were considered severe (ie, >21 days to recover). Most injuries occurred while skateboarding gaps or stairs, including any type of a jump that involved a difference in height between the take-off and landing surfaces (25.7%). Female participants accounted for a larger number of ligament sprains than expected, and experienced skateboarders were more likely to suffer more severe injuries and head/trunk injuries. Conclusion: Respondents to this survey were mainly young male adults who practiced skateboarding recreationally. Respondents of different sexes, ages, and experiences demonstrated different habits and injury patterns. The greater number of severe injuries highlights the need for injury surveillance in skateboarding to inform better prevention and rehabilitation practices.
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Li, Chuang. "Cultural Continuities and Skateboarding in Transition: In the Case of China’s Skateboarding Culture and Industry." YOUNG 30, no. 2 (March 24, 2022): 183–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11033088221081941.

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Previous research on skateboarding has been conducted largely under the lens of cultural studies. Recently, there has been growing recognition of skateboarding as an industry under capitalist structures. Nonetheless, the transition of skateboarding from a subculture to a global multi-billion dollar industry is still left untheorized. There are two primary aims of this study. First is to evaluate the implication of the theoretical transition in existing literature from the subcultural theories and the critical political economy approach in examining subcultures and cultural industries. The second is to contextualize key concepts such as authenticity and cultural intermediaries in the empirical understanding of the dynamics of distinction in the Chinese skateboarding community and industry. The evidence presented in the qualitative investigation of key members of the Chinese skateboarding community suggests that an ambivalent sociality has been neglected in previous discussions on authenticity and the precariousness of skateboarding careers. Borrowing perspectives from cultural sociology and organizational sociology, the finding on the prevalence of the Chinese concept guanxi suggests relevant implications for future research.
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Lund Bech, Lærke, Matilde Trustrup Jensen, and Signe Højbjerre Larsen. "Pigefællesskaber i skateboarding." Forum for Idræt 38 (February 23, 2023): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/ffi.v38i.136234.

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Formålet med artiklen er at bidrage med viden om, hvilken betydning pigefællesskaber har for pigers deltagelse i skateboarding. I artiklen viser vi, hvordan kønsstrukturer udfolder sig i skateboarding, og hvilke deltagelsesmuligheder piger oplever, de har. Artiklen tager afsæt i et casestudie af et dansk pigeskateboardfællesskab, som er undersøgt med kvalitative interviews og deltagende observation. Med afsæt i Pierre Bourdieus sociologi argumenterer vi for, at der knytter sig konkrete fordele, men også ulemper til etableringen af rene pigefællesskaber i forhold til at skabe bedre muligheder for pigers deltagelse og anerkendelse i skateboarding som mandsdomineret aktivitet.
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13

Post, Tina. "Notes on Skateboarding." Portable Gray 6, no. 2 (September 1, 2023): 340–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/728282.

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14

Møller, Kim. "Book Review: Gregory J. Snyder, Skateboarding LA: Inside Professional Skateboarding." YOUNG 27, no. 2 (April 19, 2018): 201–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1103308818767679.

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15

Zeng, Liang, Guang Zeng, Oscar Guerrero, and George Garcia. "A Skateboarding Experiential Learning Activity for Introductory Physics." Physics Teacher 60, no. 3 (March 2022): 196–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/10.0009688.

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Instructors of introductory college physics courses are in a unique position to explain the physics of skateboarding and its associated risks. A field trip to a skate park to explore the law of conservation of energy and measure the impact forces can enhance student analytical thinking skills and their appreciation of physics in everyday life. Through the measurement of the impact forces and student discussions of their own skateboarding experiences, students are better prepared to protect themselves from skateboarding-related physical injuries.
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16

Romero, Noah. "You're Skating on Native Land: Queering and Decolonizing Skate Pedagogy." Cultural and Pedagogical Inquiry 12, no. 1 (February 1, 2021): 230–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.18733/cpi29548.

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This paper draws from a new materialist interpretation of Maya Angelou’s Caged Bird to analyze how Queer and Indigenous skateboarders develop critical and community-responsive ways of knowing and being. This analysis is contrasted with the implications of skateboarding’s Olympic debut to theorize how non-dominant groups build self-supporting enclaves in spite of concerted efforts to regulate and exclude them from public life. Skateboarding is herein conceptualized as a critical pedagogy which enables participants to reclaim space, achieve self-defined learning goals, and challenge the authority of oppressive institutions built upon what Angelou calls “the grave of dreams.”
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17

Dupont, Tyler. "Book Review: Snyder, Gregory J., Skateboarding LA: Inside Professional Street Skateboarding." Theory in Action 12, no. 4 (October 31, 2019): 156–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3798/tia.1937-0237.1942.

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18

O’Connor, Paul. "Hong Kong Skateboarding and Network Capital." Journal of Sport and Social Issues 42, no. 6 (August 24, 2018): 419–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0193723518797040.

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The importance of East Asia to the skateboard industry is multifaceted. It represents a dense commercial asset where the “cool” of skateboarding can be leveraged for consumption. It is also a global resource for touring professional skateboarders visiting countries such as China, Korea, and Japan to film and photograph their tricks in new locations. The success of such strategies are entwined with a regional network of skateboarders, a group whose subcultural capital is operationalized through network capital. Analysis of these connections highlights that Hong Kong’s prominence in East Asian skateboarding is largely dependent on its position as a global city and hybrid entrepôt. By addressing the conservative culture of skateboarding, and the importance of Hong Kong as a global city rather than a “skateable” city, this article further contributes to the theorizing of skateboarding beyond discussions of space and resistance.
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19

Herrera, Alexander V. "Adolescent Ankle Injury-Skateboarding." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 53, no. 8S (August 2021): 436–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000764288.41656.61.

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20

Forsman, L. "Skateboarding injuries of today." British Journal of Sports Medicine 35, no. 5 (October 1, 2001): 325–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsm.35.5.325.

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21

Martin, Paul. "Embodiment in skateboarding videogames." International Journal of Performance Arts & Digital Media 9, no. 2 (August 1, 2013): 315–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/padm.9.2.315_1.

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22

Cantin-Brault, Antoine. "The Reification of Skateboarding." International journal of Science Culture and Sport 3, no. 9 (January 1, 2015): 54. http://dx.doi.org/10.14486/ijscs231.

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23

Hunt, I. K., S. Martin, and R. K. Hetzler. "METABOLIC RESPONSES TO SKATEBOARDING." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 35, Supplement 1 (May 2003): S155. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00005768-200305001-00858.

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24

O’Connor, Paul. "Skateboarding, Helmets, and Control." Journal of Sport and Social Issues 40, no. 6 (October 12, 2016): 477–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0193723516673408.

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Skateboarding has a global reach and will be included for the first time in the 2020 Olympic Games. It has transformed from a subcultural pursuit to a mainstream and popular sport. This research looks at some of the challenges posed by the opening of a new skatepark in Hong Kong and the introduction of a mandatory helmet rule. It explores attitudes to helmets in skateboard media, the local government, and among the skateboarders who use the new skatepark. It argues that helmet use is not only an issue of safety but also an issue of control. From the skateboarders’ perspective, it is about participant control over their sport, and from a government perspective, it is about accountability. The contrast between the two approaches is explored through the concepts of edgework and audit culture. As skateboarding continues to become a mainstream sporting activity, such issues of control will prove to be more relevant and must be negotiated in partnership. The growth in new skateparks, many of which are concrete, underlines the need for this discussion. It is argued that helmet use will continue to be a site of conflict as skateboarding becomes further incorporated into a mainstream sport, and that how helmets are represented in skateboarding will come to indicate who has control over the sport.
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Retsky, Joel. "Skateboarding Injuries in Children." American Journal of Diseases of Children 145, no. 2 (February 1, 1991): 188. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1991.02160020080022.

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Zalavras, Charalampos, Georgia Nikolopoulou, Daniel Essin, Nahid Manjra, and Lewis E. Zionts. "Pediatric Fractures during Skateboarding, Roller Skating, and Scooter Riding." American Journal of Sports Medicine 33, no. 4 (April 2005): 568–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0363546504269256.

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Background Skateboarding, roller skating, and scooter riding are popular recreational and sporting activities for children and adolescents but can be associated with skeletal injury. The purpose of this study is to describe the frequency and characteristics of fractures resulting from these activities. Purpose Fractures from skateboarding, roller skating, and scooter riding compose a considerable proportion of pediatric musculoskeletal injuries. Study Design Case series; Level of evidence, 4. Methods Demographic data and injury characteristics were analyzed for all patients who presented to the pediatric fracture clinic of the level I trauma center from January 2001 to May 2002 after sustaining fractures due to skateboarding, roller skating, and scooter riding. Results Among a total of 2371 fractures, the authors identified 325 fractures (13.7%) that occurred during one of these activities. There were 187 patients (mean age, 13 years; 95% male) who sustained 191 skateboard-related fractures, 64 patients (mean age, 10.8 years; 54% male) who sustained 65 fractures while roller skating, and 66 patients (mean age, 9.7 years; 64% male) who sustained 69 fractures while riding a scooter. The forearm was fractured most often, composing 48.2% of skate-boarding fractures, 63.1% of roller-skating fractures, and 50.7% of fractures due to scooter riding. Of the forearm fractures, 94% were located in the distal third. In the skateboarding group, 10 of 191 (5.2%) fractures were open injuries of the forearm, compared to 6 of 2046 (0.3%) fractures caused by other mechanisms of injury (significant odds ratio, 18.8). Conclusions Skateboarding, roller-skating, and scooter-riding accidents result in a large proportion of pediatric fractures. An open fracture, especially of the forearm, was more likely to be caused by skateboarding than by other mechanisms of injury. Use of wrist and forearm protective equipment should be considered in all children who ride a skateboard.
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Goldenberg, Marni, and Wynn Shooter. "Skateboard Park Participation: A Means-end Analysis." Journal of Youth Development 4, no. 4 (December 1, 2009): 36–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jyd.2009.240.

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Skateboarding has become a highly visible and popular activity. However, many negative stereotypes remain associated with the activity and its participants (Jones & Graves, 2000). In contrast to the negative stereotypes, skateboarding seems to provide many individuals, and youth in particular, with an important outlet for physical activity, leisure, and personal development. The purpose of this study was to investigate why skateboarders chose to visit skateboard parks, to identify outcomes of participating in skateboarding at skateboard parks, and to identify the underlying values that guide skateboarders’ choice of this specific setting. The conceptual framework for the reported study was provided by a means-end model, which views values as the key force influencing an individual’s decision to engage in a particular behavior (Gutman, 1982; Manyiwa & Crawford, 2002). The results indicate that this sample of skateboarders received a number of important benefits and, despite stereotypical views, may seek positive outcomes through skateboarding at skateboard parks. A socio-ecological model and a positive youth development framework provide a platform for interpreting the results and implications.
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WEI, XIAO, and JIN ZHOU. "Professional skateboarding trousers design: according to the three-dimensional kinematic analysis for varied skateboarding manoeuvres." Industria Textila 75, no. 01 (February 27, 2024): 86–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.35530/it.075.01.202388.

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The popularity of skateboarding has caused an expansion of enthusiasts worldwide. Moreover, skateboarding is becoming increasingly professional at an international level. Professional skateboarding trousers are regarded as critical equipment and their design research should not be overlooked. This research aims to use motion capture to measure the angular changes characteristics of critical lower limb joints in skaters during sports activities, measure the length of the knee joint during actions, and establish a formula that describes the change characteristics between the angle and the length. The formula would allow for a data reference when designing the elasticity at the knee joints of skateboarding trousers. Thus, the initial step in this research methodology was to use a Vicon motion capture system to test and analyse the kinematic characteristics of seven skaters in the squat, jump, ollie, pop shove it, heel flip, kickflip, and 180° ollie. Based on the kinematic characteristics, the dynamic movements were broken down into static postures at 0°, 45°, 90°, 112.5°, and 135°. The body surface drawing method was then employed to measure changes in the knee joint body surface dimensions of the subjects. Next, the experimental data were analysed to explore the relationship between angle and length changes. Finally, the design was developed based on the data. Analysis and processing of the experimental data yielded the following conclusions: (1) The most significant knee joint change characteristics during skateboarding was the angle change observed during an ollie. (2) Knee joint skin stretch deformation is most evident in the anterior mid-leg line y2. (3) The relationship between kinematics and the structural design of skateboarding trousers was derived from the experimental data. Specifically, the equation for the relationship between angle change and length change is given by y2 = 0.0442x + 23.906. (4) The results show that the extreme range of skin stretching in the anterior midline is between –0.7 and 6.3 cm. Therefore, the loose design of the knee part of professional skateboarding trousers should not exceed 6.3 cm. This research approach can offer an effective design solution for professional skateboard trousers and can also be applied to other types of trousers.
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Vivoni, Francisco, and Jacob Folsom-Fraster. "Crafting Cities for All: Qualitative Inquiry of the Street and the Spatial Practice of Skateboarding." Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies 21, no. 4 (April 26, 2021): 311–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15327086211004879.

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This article exposes skateboarding as a meaningful social practice within neoliberal public space. Through a qualitative inquiry of the street, it chronicles the significance of moving bodies on skateboards that disrupt neoliberalism and foment the possibility of inclusive cities. The article takes on an invitation for researchers to practice qualitative inquiry in the streets as part of its living ecology through the corporeal knowledge produced while skateboarding in Worcester, MA, USA. Furthermore, it builds on an embodied inquiry of street art and spatial justice set on challenging deep social inequalities exacerbated during the current neoliberal order. The article forwards a street inquiry of everyday life centered on skateboarding, public space and the crafting of cities for all.
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Riswanto, Florenzia Shafira Esmeralda, Anindita Alifiani Prianto, and Alexander Mamby Aruan. "THE USE OF COMPETITION AS A COMMUNICATION STRATEGY (To Increase Engagement as a Form of Brand Awareness about Local Skateboarding Shoes in Jabodetabek Area)." Profetik: Jurnal Komunikasi 13, no. 1 (September 5, 2020): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.14421/pjk.v13i1.1759.

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Abstract. The rapid development of skateboarding in Indonesia serves as a business opportunity for local entrepreneurs. Although the skateboard market in Indonesia is classified as a segmented market, but it is still a promising business. Local skateboarding shoes brand developed quite rapidly along with the development of skateboarding sports in Indonesia, this is portrayed by the high level of enthusiasm by the society who starting to play skateboard, the high amount of local skateboarding communities appears in Jabodetabek area and plentiful skateboarding events and competitions. The result of this research shows that there has been a lot of skateboarding competition in Indonesia which has been used as a communication strategy. Competitions are considered good and effective for local skateboarding shoes brand to increase engagement as a form of brand awareness, because they can take part either as the supporting element or as the skateboarding competition organizer. Besides, it also can bring a positive impression to the brands itself. In addition, the competitions held offline needs to be supported by online activities and the source includes education elements. Berlo’s Communication Model (SMCR) explains that when using a competition, it needs to be based on the communication skills, the understanding of social and cultural systems of the source and the receiver to the message that can be felt by the human five senses which will increase the success of delivering messages from the source to the receiver. The methodology of this research is qualitative and the instrument used to collect data involves interviews.Abstrak. Pesatnya perkembangan skateboard di Indonesia menjadi peluang bisnis bagi para pengusaha lokal. Meskipun pasar skateboard di Indonesia tergolong sebagai pasar yang tersegmentasi, namun bisnis pada industri ini tetap menjanjikan. Merek sepatu skateboard lokal berkembang cukup pesat seiring dengan perkembangan olahraga skateboard di Indonesia, hal ini dapat dilihat dari tingginya antusiasme masyarakat yang mulai bermain skateboard, jumlah komunitas skateboard lokal yang bermunculan di daerah Jabodetabek, hingga banyaknya acara dan kompetisi bertajuk skateboard. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa terdapat banyak kompetisi skateboard di Indonesia yang telah digunakan sebagai strategi komunikasi. Kompetisi dianggap baik dan efektif bagi para merek sepatu skateboard lokal untuk meningkatkan keterlibatan masyarakat sebagai bentuk kesadaran merek, karena mereka dapat berperan sebagai elemen pendukung atau penyelenggara kompetisi skateboard. Kompetisi juga dapat memberikan kesan positif bagi merek itu sendiri. Selain itu, kompetisi yang diadakan secara offline perlu didukung oleh aktivitas online dan mencakup unsur edukasi. Model Komunikasi Berlo (SMCR) menjelaskan bahwa ketika menggunakan sebuah kompetisi, perlu didasarkan pada keterampilan komunikasi, pemahaman csistem sosial dan budaya dari sumber dan penerima pesan yang kemudian dapat dirasakan oleh panca indera manusia untuk meningkatkan keberhasilan penyampaian pesan dari sumber ke penerima. Metode penelitian ini adalah kualitatif dan instrumen yang digunakan untuk mengumpulkan data adalah wawancara.
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Adha, Aula Munfazul. "Implementation of communication in building cohesiveness in the Denggung Skateboarding community." Symposium of Literature, Culture, and Communication (SYLECTION) 2022 3, no. 1 (November 22, 2023): 1178. http://dx.doi.org/10.12928/sylection.v3i1.14342.

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The research describes the forms of group communication within the Denggung Skateboarding community in building cohesion. According to Vanina Delonelle, a community is a gathering of people with similar interests. Communities are formed by four (4) factors, which are: a desire to share, communicate among members based on shared interests, the area where they typically gather, and the presence of individuals making decisions and determining everything. This research uses a qualitative descriptive approach. The data used in this study are the results of interviews and documentation. The interviewees are the leader and members of Denggung Skateboarding. The results of this research show that the relationship within the Denggung Skateboarding community is cohesive because they involve emotions and consider each other as siblings. The interaction within the community is also intense.
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Batuev, Mikhail, and Leigh Robinson. "What influences organisational evolution of modern sport: the case of skateboarding." Sport, Business and Management: An International Journal 8, no. 5 (November 12, 2018): 492–510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/sbm-10-2017-0052.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the processes that influence the evolution of a modern sport. It focusses on the case of international skateboarding: the sport that was recently included into the Olympic Games. Design/methodology/approach An inductive research strategy was informed by the notions of evolution of modern sport, prolympism and new institutionalism. The primary data were collected through a series of interviews and supplemented by the analysis of documents, press and social media. Findings The paper analysed how the organisation of international skateboarding has changed to date and identified three major determinants of its evolution: values of the activity, commercial interests and the Olympic movement. The following recurring discussion themes emerged: the link between commercialism and legitimisation of sport; bureaucratisation under the Olympic movement; and tensions between prolympism and values of skateboarding. Research limitations/implications A limitation of the case study method is that any conclusions refer to this particular sport and their applicability to other sports lies within analytical generalisation. Still sport governing bodies and policy makers can learn from the evolution of international skateboarding and analyse potential issues and consequences for other emerging sports. In terms of theoretical implications, the study highlights legitimisation as one the key characteristics of evolution of modern sport, which should be considered along with previously established criteria, such as bureaucratisation, commercialisation and professionalisation. Originality/value The study extends the existing research on evolution of modern sports by examining a very rich contemporary case of skateboarding, the internationally growing sport with unique organisational arrangements. It contributes to knowledge of the evolution towards legitimisation of emerging sports, but also towards sportification of popular culture and society.
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Obradovic, Milorad, and Vladimir Milenkovic. "The city as a playground: Skate parks, inclusion and new territory." Spatium, no. 46 (2021): 66–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/spat2146066o.

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There are two central topics in this study: the first topic relates to the physical space created by skateboarding, while the other relates to social capital derived from skateboard culture. The paper analyzes the case studies of three skate parks, in which the theme of social inclusion is the theoretical framework. Looking through the history of skateboarding and integration of skate parks as a part of the urban environment, the theme is concerned with bringing the openness that is part of the design of our public spaces to skateboarding culture, and in general, to the feeling of belonging as an essential part of building social capital. In the manner of shared space, public space has started to be used as a communication platform between community members looking for expression of their needs and desires. The benefits of the skateboarding settings have rarely been the subject of empirical research, so these case studies will deepen our knowledge on why social bonds connected to this sport make such a significant contribution in city landscapes. Individuality and its political manifestation have a structural role in this paper: from the appearance of the architectural figuration to the idea about a movement and a settlement, which for architecture, can be seen in the form of new territories.
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Geckle, Bethany. "Skateboarders’ Representations of Materiality: A Case Study of Rodney Mullen and Spike Jonze." Somatechnics 11, no. 3 (December 2021): 359–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/soma.2021.0365.

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Physical activity is commonly conceived of in terms of its human involvement – as a test of, and testament to, human ability. However, physical activity does not exist without the contributions of countless non-human agencies, such as equipment and environments, with which the athletes work closely and form relationships. As such, athletes have a unique understanding of non-human agency. In this article I analyse the power of non-human agency in skateboarding through the representations of the professional skateboarder Rodney Mullen and filmmaker Spike Jonze. I examine their lectures, interviews, and films to show the ways in which skateboarders experience, practice, and represent the principles of actor-network theory (ANT). Skateboarders utilise and manipulate the often-unanticipated potential of non-human tools and urban landscapes and translate them into a collaborative result. Skateboarding is a trial-and-error experiment of testing, innovating, and adapting possibilities and limitations set by a network of mediators including people and ‘things’. Mullen and Jonze commonly depict skateboarding as the product of networks rather than independent human action. Their representations reveal how skateboarders perceive and act out their role as humans within networks alongside non-human agencies such as skateboards and obstacles, and which combine to produce skateboarding.
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Diokno, Eugene C., and Michelle Jacobson. "Shoulder Pain and Weakness Skateboarding." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 39, Supplement (May 2007): S133—S134. http://dx.doi.org/10.1249/01.mss.0000273465.28791.3f.

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Feiler, S., and M. Frank. "Verletzungsmuster und Verletzungsrisiko beim Skateboarding." Sportverletzung · Sportschaden 14, no. 2 (June 2000): 59–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2000-7397.

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Van Tilburg, Christopher. "Surfing, Windsurfing, Snowboarding, and Skateboarding." Physician and Sportsmedicine 24, no. 11 (November 1996): 63–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00913847.1996.11440129.

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Tilburg, Christopher Van. "Surfing, Windsurfing, Snowboarding, and Skateboarding." Physician and Sportsmedicine 24, no. 11 (November 1996): 62–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00913847.1996.11948047.

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Shuman, Kristin M., and Michael C. Meyers. "Skateboarding injuries: An updated review." Physician and Sportsmedicine 43, no. 3 (May 27, 2015): 317–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00913847.2015.1050953.

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40

Ebling, Maria, and Mark Corner. "Virtual Learning, Decorating, and Skateboarding." IEEE Pervasive Computing 8, no. 3 (July 2009): 6–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mprv.2009.61.

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Hetzler, Ronald K., Ian Hunt, Christopher D. Stickley, and Iris F. Kimura. "Selected Metabolic Responses to Skateboarding." Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport 82, no. 4 (December 2011): 788–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02701367.2011.10599816.

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Schwamberger, Benjamin, and Mallory Stiff. "Skateboarding: Relevant, Exciting and Fun." Strategies 36, no. 2 (March 4, 2023): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08924562.2023.2174229.

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Abdul Aziz, Muhammad, Ahmad Zakiy Ramadhan, Addin Aditya, and Adita Ayu Kusumasari. "Perancangan Buku Fotografi Perkembangan Olahraga Skateboard di Kabupaten Malang." GESTALT 6, no. 1 (June 3, 2024): 15–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.33005/gestalt.v6i1.187.

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Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk merancang sebuah buku fotografi yang menggambarkan perkembangan olahraga skateboard di Kabupaten Malang, dengan fokus pada Malsel Sk8 sebagai studi kasus. Metode penelitian yang digunakan adalah penelitian kualitatif dengan pendekatan studi kasus. Data dikumpulkan melalui observasi, wawancara, dan dokumentasi. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa olahraga skateboard telah mengalami perkembangan yang signifikan di Kabupaten Malang, dengan Malsel Sk8 sebagai salah satu komunitas utama yang berperan dalam mengembangkan budaya skateboard di wilayah tersebut. Melalui buku fotografi yang dirancang, diharapkan dapat lebih memperkenalkan dan mengapresiasi perkembangan serta kontribusi Malsel Sk8 dalam memajukan olahraga skateboard di Kabupaten Malang. Kesimpulan dari penelitian ini adalah pentingnya dokumentasi visual dalam memperkuat identitas dan mempromosikan kegiatan olahraga di tingkat lokal, serta potensi besar yang dimiliki oleh komunitas skateboard dalam memengaruhi perkembangan budaya olahraga di wilayah tersebut. This research aims to design a photography book that illustrates the development of skateboarding sports in Malang Regency, with a focus on Malsel Sk8 as a case study. The research method used was qualitative research with a case study approach. Data was collected through observation, interviews, and documentation. The results showed that skateboarding sport has experienced significant development in Malang Regency, with Malsel Sk8 as one of the main communities that play a role in developing skateboarding culture in the region. Through the photography book designed, it is hoped that it can further introduce and appreciate the development and contribution of Malsel Sk8 in advancing skateboarding sports in Malang Regency. The conclusion of this research is the importance of visual documentation in strengthening identity and promoting sports activities at the local level, as well as the great potential that skateboarding communities have in influencing the development of sports culture in the region.
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O’Connor, Paul. "Beyond the youth culture: Understanding middle-aged skateboarders through temporal capital." International Review for the Sociology of Sport 53, no. 8 (February 14, 2017): 924–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690217691780.

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Responding to the call of Wheaton to discuss the position of older participants in lifestyle sports, this research presents an analysis of the experiences of middle-aged skateboarders. Through qualitative interviews, ethnographic observation, and discourse analysis of skateboard media, skateboarding is revealed to be an integral part of the biographies and identities of middle-aged skateboarders. These accounts challenge the imaging of skateboarding as a youth culture and indicate that age and time have an important currency to skateboarders. The value of age is not confined to middle-aged skateboarders but is also observable in skateboard media which corresponds with the values held more broadly in skateboard culture. The concept of temporal capital is proposed as a way to make sense of the experiences of middle-aged skateboarders, highlighting how time is at once a path to subcultural authenticity, but also a resource to be managed and scheduled for their continued engagement in skateboarding.
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Warin, Robbie. "Long Live Southbank: skateboarding, citizenship and the city." Journal of Public Space, Vol. 3 n. 3 | 2018 | FULL ISSUE (December 31, 2018): 149–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.32891/jps.v3i3.1138.

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‘The Undercroft’ underneath Queen Elizabeth’s Hall on London’s Southbank is one of London’s best known skate spots and plans, released in 2013, to fill the space with retail outlets and relocate the skateboarders to an alternative site were met with fierce opposition by the skateboarding community. In response, the group ‘Long Live Southbank’ was founded to campaign for the site’s preservation. This essay will focus on the Long Live Southbank’s 17 month campaign, asking why the local community were so opposed to the relocation of ‘the Undercroft’ to a purpose built site. By analysing a range of different media produced by Long Live Southbank this essay will look at the phenomenology of skateboarding and how the act of skateboarding affects the individual’s lived experience, arguing that the skateboarders’ resistance to relocation was tied in with their desire to be included in the ongoing production of public space, and therefore deeply embedded within their own individual and collective senses of citizenship.
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Norwood, Bridgette. "Carving in and "Carving Out" Space:." Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography 14, no. 1 (February 19, 2024): 51–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.15273/jue.v14i1.12048.

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Skateboarding is a subculture with an ideology that counters normative authority and standards of masculinity. Yet, it continues to uphold persistent misogynistic perspectives and gender discrepancies in participation (Beal 1996; McCarthy 2022). Therefore, it is critical to understand the experiences of marginalized genders in the skateboarding subculture to discover how ideas of authenticity are formed and upheld in the skate subculture and how these standards impact skateboarders of marginalized genders. This qualitative study examines the unexplored skateboard subculture in Halifax, Nova Scotia through an analysis of its symbolic membership and physical and social space. This study identifies a disassociation from ‘typical’ masculinity and outwardly favourable attitudes towards gender diversity within the Halifax skateboard community; however, gender barriers remain within this still hyper-masculine setting disguised through support. Nevertheless, the historically resistant and rebellious attitudes that coincide with skateboarding may provide a space for female and non-binary skaters to counter subcultural and societal gender norms.
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Pagaduan, Jason Edward. "Failure and Skating." Contexts 21, no. 4 (November 2022): 84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/15365042221131092.

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Ab Rasid, Aina Munirah, Rabiu Muazu Musa, Anwar P. P. Abdul Majeed, Ahmad Bisyri Husin Musawi Maliki, Mohamad Razali Abdullah, Mohd Azraai Mohd Razmaan, and Noor Azuan Abu Osman. "Physical fitness and motor ability parameters as predictors for skateboarding performance: A logistic regression modelling analysis." PLOS ONE 19, no. 2 (February 8, 2024): e0296467. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0296467.

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The identification and prediction of athletic talent are pivotal in the development of successful sporting careers. Traditional subjective assessment methods have proven unreliable due to their inherent subjectivity, prompting the rise of data-driven techniques favoured for their objectivity. This evolution in statistical analysis facilitates the extraction of pertinent athlete information, enabling the recognition of their potential for excellence in their respective sporting careers. In the current study, we applied a logistic regression-based machine learning pipeline (LR) to identify potential skateboarding athletes from a combination of fitness and motor skills performance variables. Forty-five skateboarders recruited from a variety of skateboarding parks were evaluated on various skateboarding tricks while their fitness and motor skills abilities that consist of stork stance test, dynamic balance, sit ups, plank test, standing broad jump, as well as vertical jump, were evaluated. The performances of the skateboarders were clustered and the LR model was developed to classify the classes of the skateboarders. The cluster analysis identified two groups of skateboarders: high and low potential skateboarders. The LR model achieved 90% of mean accuracy specifying excellent prediction of the skateboarder classes. Further sensitivity analysis revealed that static and dynamic balance, lower body strength, and endurance were the most important factors that contributed to the model’s performance. These factors are therefore essential for successful performance in skateboarding. The application of machine learning in talent prediction can greatly assist coaches and other relevant stakeholders in making informed decisions regarding athlete performance.
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Feletti, Francesco, and Eric Brymer. "Pediatric and adolescent injury in skateboarding." Research in Sports Medicine 26, sup1 (April 24, 2018): 129–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15438627.2018.1438285.

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Determan, J., E. Frederick, J. Cox, and M. Nevitt. "Kinetics of the skateboarding kick flip." Journal of Biomechanics 39 (January 2006): S188. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0021-9290(06)83671-7.

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