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Emily Tupper1, Tessa Pollard2, Sarah Atkinson3

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) programmes facilitate outdoor physical activity. Configurations of care, including transitions and touch, are key to participant access and sustained engagement in these movement-based activities.

Keywords:
CareCyclingEthnographyMovement programmesPhysical activityWalking

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Area of Science:

  • Public Health
  • Sociology of Sport
  • Community Health

Background:

  • Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) programmes offer unique settings for physical activity engagement.
  • Understanding access, participation, and re-engagement in structured movement is crucial for public health.
  • Volunteer-led outdoor activities present novel contexts for studying these dynamics.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the factors enabling access, participation, and re-engagement in VCSE-led movement programmes.
  • To examine the volunteer-beneficiary relationship and its role in sustained physical activity.
  • To identify key elements of care that support continued engagement in outdoor activities.

Main Methods:

  • Ethnographic study of two VCSE programmes involving walking and cycling.
  • Focus on the moments preceding and during volunteer-led outdoor activities.
  • Analysis of the volunteer-beneficiary encounter and surrounding care configurations.

Main Results:

  • Configurations of care significantly influenced moments of access and re-engagement.
  • Transitions, technologies, temporalities, and touch were critical components of the volunteer-beneficiary encounter.
  • The study highlights the importance of examining the "edges" of structured movement activities.

Conclusions:

  • Care configurations are vital for successful participation and sustained engagement in movement programmes.
  • Research into the nuances of volunteer-beneficiary interactions can inform programme design and delivery.
  • An aesthetic mode of inquiry may enhance the evaluation of movement-based interventions.