论文标题
公平,多样性和体育分析中的包容性
Equity, diversity, and inclusion in sports analytics
论文作者
论文摘要
本文介绍了体育分析领域的公平,多样性和包容性(EDI)的地标研究。我们开发了一项调查,研究了与个人和工作相关的人口统计以及对工作场所EDI的个人看法和经验。我们将调查发送给北美五个主要专业联赛的个人,加拿大奥运会和残奥会委员会的代表,NCAA I部I计划,体育技术/分析公司的公司以及大学研究小组。我们的发现表明,在体育分析中存在明显的主要群体,该群体识别为:年轻(72.0%),白人(69.5%),异性恋(89.7%)和男性(82.0%)。在职业运动中,与女性相比,管理职位的男性平均收入约30,000美元(27%)。在白人和非白人管理人员之间发现了一个较小但同样令人震惊的薪水差距为17,000美元(14%)。令人担忧的是,由于孤立或不受欢迎,女性遇到歧视的可能性几乎是考虑离开工作的五倍。尽管他们在公平的奖励和薪酬过程中达成了类似的协议,但女性“强烈同意”在公平支持,公平的工作量,拥有声音和认真对待方面,女性的频率少于男性。超过三分之一(36.3%)的女性表明,她们“强烈同意”,他们必须比其他人更努力地工作才能得到平等的重视,而男性则必须更加努力。我们以具体的建议结束了本文,可以认为可以为在体育分析领域工作的个人创造一个更公平,多样和包容性的环境。
This paper presents a landmark study of equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) in the field of sports analytics. We developed a survey that examined personal and job-related demographics, as well as individual perceptions and experiences about EDI in the workplace. We sent the survey to individuals in the five major North American professional leagues, representatives from the Olympic and Paralympic Committees in Canada and the U.S., the NCAA Division I programs, companies in sports tech/analytics, and university research groups. Our findings indicate the presence of a clear dominant group in sports analytics identifying as: young (72.0%), White (69.5%), heterosexual (89.7%) and male (82.0%). Within professional sports, males in management positions earned roughly 30,000 USD (27%) more on average compared to females. A smaller but equally alarming pay gap of 17,000 USD (14%) was found between White and non-White management personnel. Of concern, females were nearly five times as likely to experience discrimination and twice as likely to have considered leaving their job due to isolation or feeling unwelcome. While they had similar levels of agreement regarding fair processes for rewards and compensation, females "strongly agreed" less often than males regarding equitable support, equitable workload, having a voice, and being taken seriously. Over one third (36.3%) of females indicated that they "strongly agreed" that they must work harder than others to be valued equally, compared to 9.8% of males. We conclude the paper with concrete recommendations that could be considered to create a more equitable, diverse and inclusive environment for individuals working within the sports analytics sector.