ABSTRACT

The growth of the events industry brings with it concerns of sustainable management, the sharing of available resources, and ensuring that people and places are not over-exploited. While the environmental and economic dimensions of sustainability have attracted a reasonable attention in the study of events, the social and cultural aspects of sustainability have been largely neglected. This book brings together emerging critical perspectives, innovative conceptual frameworks and contemporary case studies. Events cannot be isolated from the actions of humans and this is reflected in the emphasis on people and society throughout. The next wave of sustainable discourse requires a critical synthesis of information and this book is the first to address the need for more critical approaches and a broader way of thinking about events and sustainability.

Divided into five thematic parts, the contributions delve into understanding the mainstream stances towards sustainability, the role events play in indigenous cultures and in diasporic communities, and the extent to which events influence the public discourse and civic identity. Sustainability is also examined from a strategic perspective in the events sector, and consideration is given to issues such as corporate social responsibility, greenwashing, and the power of mulit-stakeholder alliances in promoting sustainability goals.

Written by leading academics, this timely and important volume will be valuable reading for all students, researchers and academics interested in Events and the global issue of Sustainability.

chapter |12 pages

Editors' introduction

Events in the age of sustainability

part I|63 pages

Thinking critically about events and sustainability

chapter 1|15 pages

Events, society, and sustainability

Five propositions

chapter 3|15 pages

Beijing's ‘People's Olympics’

From slogan to sustainability

chapter 4|18 pages

Rethinking events in higher and further education

A systemic sustainability perspective

part II|74 pages

Events, sustainability and community

chapter 6|20 pages

Reclaiming identity and territory

Events and Indigenous culture

chapter 7|15 pages

Sustainability and community networks

The case of the Indian diaspora

chapter 8|21 pages

Peace through tourism

A sustainable development role for events

part III|43 pages

Strategic perspectives and the events sector

chapter 11|15 pages

Conventions and conferences

Trends and challenges in sustainability

part IV|49 pages

Insights from the field

part V|24 pages

Sustainable futures