ABSTRACT

This book provides theoretical and empirical perspectives on the urban impact of mega-events globally. It takes mega-events as an instance to analyse urban transformations and their effects on citizenship.

With contributions from leading scholars in the field, the book presents innovative and multidimensional analyses of mega-events with an international selection of case studies. The work provides a grounded theorisation of mega-events in the first part and scrutinizes its practices and processes in the second. Each chapter explores mega-events as crucial drivers and accelerators of urban and citizenship transformations. Rather than just focusing on a staged momentum, this book takes stock of the ‘before’ and ‘after’ that these events imply for the urban condition.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars in urban studies, human geography, economics, architecture, planning, sociology, political science. It will also appeal to professionals and policy makers engaged in the planning, hosting and management of mega-events.

part II|150 pages

Mega-events' practices and processes

chapter 946|13 pages

Mega-events and other disasters

Some evidence from Italy

chapter 11|12 pages

Time, democracy, social and environmental justice in the urban fabrication of the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games

What the mobilization of the inhabitants of Seine-Saint-Denis reveals