ABSTRACT

Urban Events, Place Branding and Promotion explores the phenomenon of place event marketing, examining the ways in which events are used to brand and disseminate information about a place. It provides a novel contribution to the literature, capturing the growing interest in place promotion, and offers in-depth insights on the role of events.

With a focus on urban locations, this book defines the scope and concept of place event marketing. It demonstrates that different kinds of events, for leisure and business, can be used to successfully develop, promote and brand different types of places. Individual chapters written by a variety of leading academics explore how various public and non-governmental institutions that deal with promotion and marketing communications of places can implement event marketing activities and how such institutions organize, co-organize and sponsor different events. The effects of event marketing activities on urban place promotion and branding are thoroughly explored through a variety of international empirical case studies.

This will be of great interest to upper-level students and researchers in events marketing and management, tourism and the broader field of urban geography. The concluding chapter also proposes future research directions.

chapter 1|24 pages

The concept of place event marketing

Setting the agenda

chapter 2|22 pages

Cultural promotion of place as ‘northern’ space

The case of the Umeå2014 – European Capital of Culture event

chapter 3|16 pages

Branding authenticity

Perceptions of La Patum de Berga, a complex place marketing event in Catalonia, Spain

chapter 4|23 pages

Participatory cultural events and place attachment

A new path towards place branding?

chapter 6|19 pages

Place branding through culture and arts events

Cases from Eastern Canada

chapter 7|17 pages

Resisting Rio de Janeiro’s event-led place promotion

From insurgent rebranding to festive counter-spectacle

chapter 10|16 pages

Brand Hong Kong

Art hub for China’s Belt and Road Initiative

chapter 11|7 pages

Conclusions