Skip navigation

Can parkrun be an antidote to pandemic pressures?

19th July 2021

Academics from Northumbria University, Newcastle, have published a research paper explaining why parkruns are so popular, particularly among those in managerial and professional positions.

The research, Lost and found: parkrun, work and identity, was carried out by Dr Russell Warhurst and Dr Kate Black from Newcastle Business School at Northumbria in conjunction with parkrun UK. It comes as the high-profile mass-participation events are set to resume on Saturday July 24 following the easing of Covid-19 restrictions. Published in Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health, Dr Warhurst and Black investigated why despite significant efforts to broaden the appeal of parkrun among the wider population, a disproportionate number of parkrunners are in managerial and professional careers. Their research explored the diverse reasons why such runners take part and reveals some surprising results.  

Started in 2004, parkrun has become a major mass-participation running event, with hundreds of thousands taking part together over five-kilometre distances in different locations across the UK every Saturday.  The huge growth in popularity pre pandemic had seen the events widely lauded in the fight against obesity.  

Dr Warhurst explains: “The success of parkrun has typically been explained in terms of a reaction to the dangers of obesity and sedentary lives and, particularly in relation to professionals and managers as having social and mental wellbeing benefits. Our research delved deeper, inviting parkrunners at one of the UK’s larger parkruns in Newcastle to participate in interviews and explain just what parkrun means for them. We found that managers’ and professionals’ reported less satisfaction from their work than might once have been the case as these workers are subject to ever increasing performance standards, individual accountability and decreasing autonomy and discretion. 

“While to some extent running was extending these forces of control into workers’ leisure time, reinforcing, for example, the imperative to continuously improve, achieve and never fail, our results also paint a more positive picture. With its unique ethos, parkrun is enabling managerial and professional runners to not only escape from the isolation and pressures of their work but to discover or rediscover a more autonomous, holistic, healthier and sustainable sense-of-self.” 

Dr Warhurst and Dr Black believe the results of their research provide support for the value of parkrun post-pandemic in view of the further isolation and pressures that Covid-19 has brought.

Dr Black adds: “Managerial and professional runners are encouraged to reflect upon and engage with the non-competitive, participatory ethos of parkrun. This reconnection will enable such runners to avoid reinforcing what might have been lost in their work lives and to use parkrun to find a new, positive sense-of-self post-pandemic."

Newcastle Business School

Newcastle Business School has a global reputation for delivering some of the best business management education in the UK.

Newcastle Business School

Newcastle Business School has a global reputation for delivering some of the best business management education in the UK.

a sign in front of a crowd
+

Northumbria Open Days

Open Days are a great way for you to get a feel of the University, the city of Newcastle upon Tyne and the course(s) you are interested in.

Research at Northumbria
+

Research at Northumbria

Research is the life blood of a University and at Northumbria University we pride ourselves on research that makes a difference; research that has application and affects people's lives.

NU World
+

Explore NU World

Find out what life here is all about. From studying to socialising, term time to downtime, we’ve got it covered.


Latest News and Features

plastic bottles
Pictured in the NU-OMICS DNA sequencing research facility at Northumbria University are (left to right) Andrew Nelson, Kim Nguyen-Phuoc, Dr Matthew Bashton, Clare McCann and Professor Darren Smith.
Feeding Families volunteer holding a box in the warehouse
an image of the Earth from space
New study demonstrates an inclusive approach to leading research
a illustration showing a Victorian courtroom scene
Members of the Common Sense Policy Group at Northumbria University have released a new report with Insights North East which presents cutting-edge evidence on regional public opinion on the future of transport policy in the North East.
All Jumbled Up Report Cover
More events

Upcoming events

Interior Educators Conference 2024
-

Northumbria University Business and Law School

-

Back to top