Recreational game and social sport as law policy. Its relationship with childhood in socially and economically deprived communities
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Abstract
Currently, it is widely known that sports, exercise and recreational physical activities have benefits for human and social development as well as for their establishment as a human right within different legal activities. This right to sport and recreational game during childhood is made explicit in the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN, 1989), and the National Education Act, and the Integral Protection Act (Law 26.061). The aim of this article is to analyze the implementation of public policies through a case study in La Matanza, in three socio-residential areas of slums or urban settlements, with children from 4 to 14 years old as the target population. Adopting qualitative perspectives, we carried out the analysis of the theoretical and methodological approach together with objective field practices. The results show that programs oriented towards sport as a social practice have limitations when it comes to translating the essence of human development from a rights approach into concrete practice, as well as covering, constructing and implementing educational offers in the field of game and recreational sport.
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Tuñón, I., Laiño, F., & Castro, H. (2014). Recreational game and social sport as law policy. Its relationship with childhood in socially and economically deprived communities. Educación Física Y Ciencia, 16(1). Retrieved from https://efyc.fahce.unlp.edu.ar/article/view/EFyCv16n01a04
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