Appendix 1: Further reading
This section provides brief introductions and links to campaigns and initiatives by Sport England and others in relation to accessibility and inclusion.
This is included as a webpage (instead of a PDF document) so that it can be regularly updated.
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Buddle
Buddle (formerly Club Matters) is part of the mission to address inequalities and unlock the advantages of sport and physical activity for all.
Read moreThe learning and support resources in this link are supported and complemented by the Tools and Community sections, as well as useful links to partner resources found within each page.
Specifically, find out more about creating welcoming and inclusive environments, connecting with local communities and diversifying offers.
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Moving to Inclusion
A collaborative initiative from all the UK sports councils.
Read moreIt provides sport and physical activity organisations with the resources and support needed to foster a more diverse, inclusive and socially responsible sector.
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This Girl Can
Launched in January 2015, This Girl Can is our nationwide campaign to get women and girls moving, regardless of shape, size and ability.
Read moreThis Girl Can believes that there’s no right way to get active – if it gets your heart rate up, it counts. And we want more women to find what’s right for them.
The campaign celebrates active women who are doing their thing no matter how they look, how well they do it or how sweaty they get.
We want to challenge the conventional idea of what exercise looks like and reach out to women of all backgrounds who feel left behind by traditional exercise.
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This Girl Can & ukactive: Safe Spaces to Move
A collaborative project between our This Girl Can campaign and ukactive, the association that promotes the interests of commercial fitness gyms and community leisure centres.
Read moreIt's designed to support women and girls to be active, confident and safe in gyms, sports and leisure spaces.
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Tackling Racism and Racial Inequality in Sport Review (TRARIIS)
In response to the murder of George Floyd in 2020, the five UK’s five sports councils came together seeking to understand and address the racial inequalities that exist across all areas of the sport and physical activity landscape.
Read moreThe result of this included independent research, extensive analysis of sector data and subsequent commitments from each of the sports councils to tackle racism and racial inequalities.
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We Are Undefeatable
A movement that supports people with a range of long-term health conditions to be active in a way that works for them.
Read moreWe Are Undefeatable is a collaboration between 15 leading health and social care charities that is supported by Sport England and the National Lottery.
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Appendix 2: Overview and links to accessible and inclusive practices, projects and organisations
This section provides brief introductions and links to organisations, policies, tools and initiatives that support a range of good accessibility and inclusion practices.
This is included as a webpage (instead of a PDF document) so that it can be regularly updated.
This list is not exhaustive; please let us know if there are more examples we can include.
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Access Sport
Access Sport trains, equips and supports community sports clubs, organisations and volunteers to provide inclusive programmes, unleashing their potential to transform the lives of underserved young people in their local communities.
Read moreThe Inclusive Club Network launched in September 2023; over time this area will grow and become an archive everyone can keep coming back to on their inclusion journey.
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Aspire employability guides
Although one in five of the working-age population in the UK are classed as disabled, only 52% are employed compared to 81% of non-disabled people, and there are indications that the employment gap is far greater within the leisure sector workforce.
Read moreAspire, a disability charity and community leisure operator, have produced three guides, following their successful ‘InstructAbility’ programme, which helped hundreds of disabled people become qualified fitness professionals.
Aspire EmployAbility Leisure guidance documents | CIMSPA
- Guide A for disabled people, ‘Training and working in the fitness and leisure sector’, is a guide to inform and inspire disabled people to start a career in the sector.
- Guide B for training providers and awarding bodies, ‘Training disabled learners in the fitness and leisure sector’, supports those delivering training to provide inclusive and accessible courses.
- Guide C for employers, ‘Employing disabled people in the fitness and leisure sector’, provides guidance about inclusion and how to become a disability confident employer and recruit and develop more disabled staff.
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Activity Alliance
The Activity Alliance is a national charity and leading voice for disabled people in sport.
Read moreIt has created many resources that, whether you are a volunteer in a club or managing a national project, help to engage more disabled people in sport and activity.
There is a filter function to search by topic and find guidance and resources from Activity Alliance.
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British Blind Sport
There are many barriers to overcome for those with a visual impairment to have the same opportunities as sighted people to be active.
Read moreBritish Blind Sport have created training resources to assist those who are delivering sporting sessions with support and guidance on how to include people with sight loss.
This toolkit aims to provide helpful information to further enhance excellent local work that is currently happening, suggesting ways for clubs and sight loss organisations to work in partnership, as well as offering guidance for those who are in the initial stages of considering accessible and inclusive sport.
British Blind Sport: general resources
British Blind Sport have also created toolkits to help coaches support people with a visual impairment for specific sporting activities.
British Blind Sport: sport-specific resources
British Blind Sport have also teamed up with some national governing bodies to run sport-specific coaching courses to support people who have a visual impairment.
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CP Sport
CP Sport are a national disability sport organisation and charity.
Read moreThey encourage people with cerebral palsy to live more active lives by promoting the opportunity, capability and motivation involved in taking part in sport and physical activities.
They have a range of resources and support for organisations, parents, teachers and coaches to ensure sport and physical activity is accessible and inclusive for people of all ages with cerebral palsy.
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Dementia-friendly sport and physical activity
Around 850,000 people in the UK live with dementia, and ensuring they face no barriers when becoming or remaining active is a challenge.
Read moreLeisure pursuits, including physical activity, are among the top activities people with dementia want to do, but there are a range of barriers that prevent them from taking part.
By becoming dementia-friendly, leisure centres, gyms, sports clubs and community centres can reap the benefits, which include:
- An improved customer experience
- Increased revenue
- Better staff retention
- Being able to help those with dementia to live happier, healthier lives.
As part of our collaboration with the Richmond Group of Charities, we’ve funded a project by the Alzheimer's Society looking into the barriers faced by people living with dementia as they try to take part in sport and be physically active.
The Dementia-friendly Sport and Physical Activity Guide details how providers can become dementia-friendly, thanks to evidence gathered as part of the project. We’re equipping the sport and physical activity sector with the resources and knowledge they require to unite against dementia.
The project as a whole is part of our £1.3 million investment of National Lottery money into the Richmond Group of Charities, who work with those with long-term health conditions to help them get active.
To access the guide, click the link below, from where you’ll be taken to the official Alzheimer’s Society page. You’ll need to complete a short form online to download the document.
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Disability Snowsport UK
Disability Snowsport UK (DSUK) is the leading adaptive snowsport charity in the UK.
Read moreTheir mission is to make winter sports accessible for everyone, regardless of disability, injury, or experience.
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DSUK welcome all disabled children and adults, whether they have lifelong physical or sensory processing differences, intellectual disabilities, are deaf or visually impaired, or have experienced a life-changing illness or injury.
They strive to remove the barriers to taking part so that disabled children and adults, and their families can enjoy the freedom, independence and the physical and mental wellbeing benefits of skiing and snowboarding. Snowsport can help unlock potential and build more confidence in everyday life too. -
Dwarf Sport Association UK
Dwarf Sport Association UK is a national disability sports organisation and charity.
Read moreThey promote and provide regular sporting opportunities for individuals with dwarfism and restricted growth.
They have a range of resources and support for organisations, schools, teachers and coaches to ensure sport, PE and exercise is accessible and inclusive for people of all ages with dwarfism and restricted growth conditions.They also work with governing bodies of sport to provide sport-specific guidance and resources.
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International Mixed Ability Sports
Mixed Ability recognises the right of everyone to participate in community sport and benefit from its transformational power.
Read moreMixed Ability includes people facing a whole range of barriers to participation, including physical and learning disabilities, mental and physical health conditions, age-related impairments, low confidence, or other personal circumstances alongside people who don’t experience any of these barriers.
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LimbPower
LimbPower is a national disability sports organisation and charity.
Read moreThey support amputees and individuals with limb impairments to find suitable sports or leisure activities based on their needs and abilities.
They have a range of resources and guides to support inclusive provision for amputees and individuals with limb impairments.
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Pride Sports
Pride Sports was established in 2006.
Read moreThey were the first, and remain one of three, organisations working across the UK to challenge LGBTQ+ stigma and discrimination in sport, and work to improve access to sport for LGBTQ+ people and communities.
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Para fencing (British Fencing)
British Fencing took on the responsibility for Para fencing on 1 April 2022, after a merger with British Disability Fencing.
Read moreWork is currently being undertaken to incorporate Para fencing into the governing body’s priorities, including recreational and GB representation.
Para fencing, previously known as wheelchair fencing, originated at Stoke Mandeville Hospital. It is a static sport where the player is clamped to a piste in a metal frame. Competitive fencing was first introduced in 1953.
It has been a Paralympic sport since 1960 and is now played worldwide. To compete at the Paralympic Games, players must complete while sitting in a wheelchair.
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Royal National Institute of the Blind (RNIB)
RNIB is the UKs leading sight loss charity, offering practical and emotional support to blind and partially sighted people, their families and carers.
Read moreThey raise awareness of the experiences of blind and partially sighted people and campaign for change to make society more accessible for all, including in sports and physical activity, both as participants and spectators.
See Sport Differently delivers accessible home workout videos, training for local clubs and sight loss organisations, workforce training for coaches, and guidance for stadiums.
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Sense
Sense is a leading national disability charity that supports people with complex disabilities.
Read moreThey are dedicated to empowering people with complex disabilities to lead healthy and active lives.
Sense Active have a range of training, resources and support available to help those in the sport and physical activity sector offer accessible opportunities for people with complex disabilities.
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StreetGames
StreetGames is one of the leading ‘sport for development’ organisations in the UK.
Read moreThey work across the sport and physical activity sector and wider communities to ensure young people from underserved and income-scarce communities have equitable access to sport and physical activity.
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Star* Scheme
Star* Scheme works across a range of RFU rugby clubs.
Read moreIt supports young people and their families who have multiple adverse childhood experiences or mental health issues.
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Special Olympics GB
Special Olympics Great Britain uses the power of sport to transform the lives of children and adults with an intellectual disability.
Read moreThey provide support and guidance on engaging people with intellectual disabilities in sport and physical activity.
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Sporting Equals
Sporting Equals work across the UK to tackle racism and racial discrimination in sport and physical activity.
Read moreThey support, promote and advocate for the inclusion and leadership of culturally diverse communities across the sector.
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Sport for Confidence
Sport for Confidence use occupational therapy to reimagine opportunities for disabled people to be active.
Read moreThey do this by providing support and activities in a range of leisure centres and community spaces.
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UK Deaf Sport
UK Deaf Sport (UKDS) is national disability sports organisation and charity.
Read moreTheir mission is to lead opportunities for more deaf people to participate in sport throughout their lives and for more deaf athletes to perform on the world stage.
UKDS have a range of resources and training for coaches, organisations and people supporting players in sporting environments.
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Women in Sport
The gender gap is still prevalent in sport and physical activity, with women and girls experiencing more barriers for a variety of reasons
Read moreWomen in Sport have created a guide to support the sector to reframe sport for teenage girls specifically.
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WheelPower
WheelPower is the national charity for wheelchair sport.
Read moreThey support people with physical disabilities of all ages to lead a healthier and more active life through movement, activity and sport.
The charity aims to increase participation at all levels, tackling inequalities in sport, improving accessibility and overcoming barriers to engagement.
They have training and resources available to support teachers and coaches to adapt sessions for wheelchair participants.
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Wheels for All
Wheels for All embraces disabled people and people who would otherwise not be able to cycle, through providing fun and friendly activity in 28 locations across the country.
Read moreEach centre provides a range of specially adapted cycles, which means that anyone can experience the feeling of freedom, the breeze on their face, and the sense of achievement that comes with inclusive cycling.
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Youth Sport Trust
The Youth Sport Trust equips educators and empowers young people with the vision of creating a future where every child enjoys the life-changing benefits of play and sport.
Read moreThe website provides resources for PE teachers and coaches and running activities for children, and includes resources for those with specific identities such as ethnicity and faith, and girls' resources.
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