4.4 Article

Framing Event Legacy in a Prospective Host City: Managing Vancouver's Olympic Bid

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORT MANAGEMENT
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 42-56

Publisher

HUMAN KINETICS PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1123/JSM.2013-0294

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In preparation for Olympic bids, city officials and event managers often cite event legacies and argue that such benefits may be realized for decades. Meanwhile, public support is extremely important when moving forward with a bid; legacy has therefore become a prominent feature in bid committee rhetoric and in the management of event bidding, and how the notion of legacy is managed in the media by bid proponents will be key to a successful bid. This paper explores how legacy was framed in the newspaper media during the Olympic bid in Vancouver, where city officials, local politicians, and members of the bid committee focused their pro-bid arguments around infrastructure, economic, and social legacies. Results show how these legacies entered the bid discourse at various points in the domestic and international bid competitions, as supporters moved away from discussions of new infrastructure development and economic impacts toward intangible event benefits.

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