![A group of teenage girls smiling](https://womeninsport.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/53100622294_b4cda96846_k-1-1.jpg)
Breaking Barriers: Supporting disabled teenage girls to be active
Our latest research explores the additional barriers that disabled teenage girls face when it comes to sport and exercise.
Our latest research explores the additional barriers that disabled teenage girls face when it comes to sport and exercise.
In sport, girls are limited by stereotypes that stifle their joy, prevent them from learning skills and steal their self-belief. Find out how you can prevent stereotyping in your primary school today.
Deaf teenage girls are at increased risk of dropping out of sport and face additional barriers to participation than hearing girls.
By choosing to leave a gift to Women in Sport in your will you can help us to create lasting positive change for women and girls in sport and society.
When will women’s bodies be celebrated for what they can do, not what they look like?
If finding innovative solutions is at the heart of your company or brand’s work, then you share a lot in common with our mission here at Women in Sport.
With the government's aim of getting more people into work, it's important we talk about gendered health inequalities and how sport can help level the playing field.
A digital campaign was created to activate Sport England’s ‘This Girl Can’ campaign around running, to include content that would inspire, inform and engage women aged 14 to 40.
We are continuously researching and gaining new insights into sport through the eyes of women and girls across a range of communities, ages, life stages and backgrounds.
Women in Sport’s vision is that no one is excluded from the joy, fulfilment and lifelong benefits of sport. Yet all too often, women and girls are still missing out.