80 research outputs found
Planning and Leveraging Event Portfolios: Towards a Holistic Theory
This conceptual paper seeks to advance the discourse on the leveraging and legacies of events by examining the planning, management, and leveraging of event portfolios. This examination shifts the common focus from analyzing single events towards multiple events and purposes that can enable cross-leveraging among different events in pursuit of attainment and magnification of specific ends. The following frameworks are proposed: (1) event portfolio planning and leveraging, and (2) analyzing events networks and inter-organizational linkages. These frameworks are intended to provide, at this infancy stage of event portfolios research, a solid ground for building theory on the management of different types and scales of events within the context of a portfolio aimed to obtain, optimize and sustain tourism, as well as broader community benefits
Finance as ‘bizarre bazaar’: using documents as a source of ethnographic knowledge
Markets and finance have long attracted ethnographic interest but the nature of their activity
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opaque,
secretive, and increasingly placeless
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precludes traditional ethnographic fieldwork. In this paper we
propose documents as an
alternative access point to these organisations as an ethnographic object of
enquiry. Documents do not only present a written record, they also enact relationships and encode
tacit understandings. We develop Geertz’s work on the bazaar by taking an indire
ct route to access
the field site
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Collateral Debt Obligations
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through documents. In reading these documents, we
assume the position of investors who, in the absence of alternative publicly available information, are
dependent on the documentary accounts
made available to them by the sellers. These media act in
ways that are similar to tourist guidebooks, a comparison we use to reframe the exchange as one that
builds upon sociocultural relations rather than the abstract market relationships described by
m
ainstream economists. We propose that these documents are not merely representational artefacts
of the organisation, but serve to establish and maintain social relationships between buyers and
sellers through the management, standardisation and ritualisati
on of information disclosed to the
investor
Free independent travellers? British working holiday makers in Australia
There is a renewed interest among geographers in tourism and how tourism makes the world and its people modern. In this paper, I engage with this renewed interest byway of a case study: British working holiday makers in Australia. Drawing on two modes of research practice, ethnography and political economy, I argue that, while working holidays may be structured in numerous ways, they also involve challenges,active individuals, heterogeneous spaces, and slow time (for reflection and inscription), which together, in a sense, make their makers modern. I frame this engagement, this argument, with a debate familiar to geographers: the problem of FreeIndependent Traveller
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