This article examines the broader community, cultural, and social functions of boxing gyms beyond their role as sites of physical training. Drawing on a 24-month ethnographic case study of Oak Lane Amateur Boxing Club (a pseudonym), an ethnic minority-led gym in an inner-urban neighbourhood in the East Midlands of England, the paper situates boxing spaces within wider debates on leisure, sociability, and social cohesion. Observations and interviews with twenty-seven participants revealed how the gym’s culture combined discipline with conviviality, extending beyond training sessions into shared leisure practices such as group outings and community events. The gym provided a safe and affirming racialised space for ethnic minority participants, while also enabling conditional intercultural engagement. The study contributes to sociological understandings of leisure by highlighting how grassroots sporting spaces can serve as infrastructures of resilience, solidarity, and cultural resistance, particularly for communities facing structural inequalities. It argues that ethnic minority-led gyms such as Oak Lane Amateur Boxing Club should be recognised as critical sites of community-building.
Christian Davis (Tue,) studied this question.