
Contents
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Rationales Rationales
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Subject matter Subject matter
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Analytic approach Analytic approach
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Mega-event change and contextual social change Mega-event change and contextual social change
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Book structure and contents Book structure and contents
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Extract
Book Introductions should aim to answer three main questions, namely, why the book has been written (and thus relatedly why it might possibly be of interest to readers), what it is about and how its concerns and contents will be addressed and organised. In this Introduction I will address these three questions.
Rationales
The rationales for writing this book are at once personal, practical and intellectual. Hopefully the latter two rationales in particular also provide reasons why the book may be of interest to people concerned with the study of mega-events and events more generally, so I will begin with them. Firstly, on the practical front the field of mega-events, together with its hinterland of the world of less-than-mega cultural and sporting events in general, has developed and grown in various significant ways since the turn of the millennium. In recent times events have also become much more visible in policy terms, in media discourse and in public awareness than they were in previous decades. However, at the same time as they seem to be becoming more important to us than they have ever been, they are also becoming, in some cases and in some aspects, more criticised than ever before. We increasingly make mega-events part of our lives at the same time as becoming witnesses to the possibility that some of them might not have much of a future. There are significant problems both at the level of particular events and at the level of mega-event organisers. At the level of particular events the transmission of good practice within the world of mega-events remains weak and unreliable. For instance, in spite of the rise of public concern for mega-event legacies or long-term impacts, the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics had a negative impact on its region within Russia’s eastern Black Sea coast and Caucasus mountains; the planning of the 2015 Expo in Milan made little clear, agreed and effective provision for an urban legacy; and the planning of the 2016 Rio Olympics suffered from a range of important and preventable political, economic and ecological problems.1
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