Affiliation:
1. Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York jlauermann@mec.cuny.edu
Abstract
This article reviews recent scholarship on the urban politics of mega-events.
Mega-events have long been promoted as drivers of urban development, based on their potential to generate beneficial legacies for host cities. Yet the mega-event industry is increasingly struggling to find cities willing to host. Political arguments that promote mega-events to host cities include narratives about mega-event legacy—the potential for events to generate long-term benefits—and mega-event leveraging—the idea that cities can strategically link event planning to other policy agendas. In contrast, the apparent decline in interest among potential host cities stems from two political shifts: skepticism toward the promises made by boosters, and the emergence of new kinds of protest movements. The article analyzes an example of largely successful opposition to mega-events, and evaluates parallels between the politics of mega-events and those of other urban megaprojects.
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
29 articles.
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