A Game Free From Discrimination: The FA Release New EDI Strategy (2024-2028)
The FA have today published their new four-year equality, diversity, and inclusion [EDI] strategy, titled A Game Free From Discrimination, which sets out the long-term commitment to celebrate and promote diversity within English football, as well as their ambition to tackle all forms of discrimination in our game.
A Game Free From Discrimination will run until the end of the 2027-28 season, and focuses on three core pillars:
• Boosting representation by improving the diversity of officials, coaches, volunteers, players and our employees.
• Driving inclusion by ensuring everybody involved in the game, in whichever capacity, feels welcome.
• Tackling discrimination by creating a culture where prejudice and abuse is routinely challenged and addressed, from grassroots through to the elite level of the game.
Read the full strategy here
The new strategy represents the collective efforts across the FA, with the three areas of focus deeply embedded within the grassroots game, disability football, the women’s and girls’ game, FA Learning, our County FA network, and our own people.
The key deliverables outlined within A Game Free From Discrimination, which we have committed to achieving by the end of the 2027-28 season, are to:
• Increase the number of players, coaches and referees from underrepresented groups.
• Unite leaders across professional football to tackle big EDI challenges.
• Deliver meaningful and impactful campaigns across the game.
• Drive EDI best practice into our County FA network.
• Continue to increase the diversity of the FA workforce and its leaders.
This new announcement follows the publication last month of our new four-year strategy, ‘Inspiring Positive Change Through Football’, which focuses on the biggest opportunities and challenges that need to be addressed across English football – with one of the four game changers identified being to deliver a game free from discrimination.
Mark Bullingham, FA chief executive, said: "Tackling discrimination is one of our core ambitions so we will continue to unite the game to confront this societal issue. Through our new strategy, we will work with our partners across football to boost representation, drive inclusion and tackle discrimination at all levels of our game. We have seen how the power of football can bring communities together and celebrate diversity, and we want to continue to use our influence to deliver positive and lasting change that we can all be proud of."
Yasir Mirza, FA equality, diversity and inclusion director, said: "We know the challenge is big, but through collaboration, impactful campaigns, an effective sanctioning framework and education, we can make real progress. Our focus over the next four years will be on three core areas of boosting representation, driving inclusion, and tackling discrimination.
"From grassroots football, coach education, and the women’s and girls’ game to disability football, our England teams, and our own workforce, we will ensure this is ingrained into everything we do, to ultimately help create an environment where everybody feels welcome to take part in our game.”
Key highlights from our 2021-24 EDI strategy, A Game For All, included:
• Our workforce: Delivering gender pay gap results well below the national average, while increasing the percentage of women at each level of our organisation by at least 30 per cent, and increasing ethnic minority representation to 17 per cent.
• Coaching: Increased diversity across all FA coaching courses, with ongoing funding to increase participation from underrepresented groups and to support people from disadvantaged socio-economic backgrounds; continued growth of the England Elite Coach Programme.
• Grassroots football: Welcoming a record number of Black, Asian, Mixed and Other Ethnicity players; launching Enough is Enough to raise awareness of discriminatory behaviour and the significant consequences that will face perpetrators of hate; ongoing collaboration with Kick It Out to tackle serious misconduct and build trust in reporting mechanisms.
• Women and girls: Campaigned for better access to football for girls in school and increased participation levels.
• LGBTQ+ inclusion: Marching in Pride in London for the third successive year, with FA employees also participating in Manchester Pride for the first time in August 2024; 10-year anniversary of support for the Rainbow Laces campaign.
• Faith and football: Bringing faith and football closer together with regular events to mark Vaisakhi, Ramadan and Chanukah at Wembley Stadium, while also forming an antisemitism working group to focus efforts on tackling this issue across English football.
• South Asian inclusion: Convening a group of key stakeholders from across English football to help develop The FA’s first ever strategy targeted at South Asian communities, to be published later this season.
• Disability football: Ongoing support for disability football, successfully hosting the FA Disability Cup at St. George’s Park for the eighth time, including finals across partially sighted, amputee, blind, cerebral palsy, powerchair and deaf football.
• Match officials: Launching an ambitious recruitment plan for more diverse referees
• Online Safety Act: Lobbying UK Government on the Online Safety Act 2023 to ensure that social media companies can be held to account for the content on their platforms
• Mandatory reporting: Using the landmark Football Leadership Diversity Code as a foundation to introduce mandatory diversity reporting across the professional game, which will help to provide greater transparency and maintain the pressure for positive change.
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