9 research outputs found
Social Policy for Sport Events: Leveraging (Relationships with) Teams from Other Nations for Community Benefit
Recent work on sport events has argued that host governments should do
more to leverage events in order to obtain and spread the benefits. This study uses
ethnographic methods to compare two cities’ implementation of a programme designed
to leverage the presence of visiting teams training for the 2006 Commonwealth Games.
Whereas one city formulated and implemented a detailed strategic plan to obtain
benefits from its relationship with its adopted visiting team (Papua New Guinea), the
other made no effort to benefit from adopting a visiting team (Wales). The city that
leveraged its visiting team obtained new relationships, cultural insights, and improved
organisational networks, whereas the city that did not leverage obtained no comparable
benefits. The difference was due to the disparity in strategic vision by the two city
governments and the vague mandate of the state programme which had caused each
city to adopt its chosen team. Future work should explore factors that foster and that
inhibit effective leverage before and during sport events