Foreword: Legacy, the FIFA Perspective Introduction: Sport, Legacy and Leadership Preface: Reflections on legacy: Olympic cities and London 2012 Part 1: Planning and Governance of Legacy 1. A Strategic and Pluralistic approcach to legacy: the case of the Giro d’Italia 2. Economic legacy to cities of hosting mega sports events: a case study of Beijing 2008 3. The 1908 Olympic Games: a case study in accidental and incidental legacies 4. A stakeholder analysis of the governance of the 2010 FIFA World Cup – a case studyof the city of Cape Town 5. Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games: Modes of Legacy Network Governance Part 2. Urbanisation and Legacy 6. Sydney Olympic Park 2000 to 2010: A Case Study of Legacy Implementation over the Longer Term 7. Croke Park as a historic venue: combining national legacy with multiple use 8. The Legacy of Memory: The Stockholm and Helsinki Olympic stadia as living memorials 9. The legacy of the 2004 Olympics for the Athens transport system 10. Framing the future: sustainability, legacy and the 2012 London Games Part 3: Social and Cultural Legacies 11. Paralympic Legacy: What Legacy? 12. A Lost Legacy of Fraternity? The case of European youth football 13. Cultural Olympiad or an Olympics for cultural regeneration? ‘Torino 2006’ and itslegacy 14. Major sporting events and long-lasting tourism impacts: 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany 15. A socially responsible business legacy: Raising standards in procurement, supplychains and employment at the London Olympics of 2012 Part 4: Human Capital and Legacy 16. City Capacity Building: Preparing to Exploit the Legacy of a Large-Scale SportsEvent. The Case of Valencia and the 2007 America’s Cup 17. Transferring knowledge, know-how and capability: Managing and sharingknowledge for future events 18. From the first soccer Women's World Championship in 1991 to the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008: How capacity-building in small scale tournaments can help win Mega-event bids 19. Learning Disability Sport, Volunteers and Legacy: The Case of Special OlympicsGreat Britain National Games 2009 20. The Impact of the Olympics on the High Performance Legacy of a Host Country Part 5: The Politics and Image of Legacy 21. The political and diplomatic legacy of the Montréal Olympics 22. Media, Sport and Memory: the Mediated Legacies of Great Sporting Events 23. ‘Global visibility and prestige’: the anticipated legacies of mega sporting events in the Gulf States 24. Modern temples of marble and concrete: the legacy of the unsuccessful Olympic ambition of fascist Rome 25. The mixed legacy of Munich: The material, cultural and political consequences of the 1972 Olympic Games
Richard Holt is Professor of History in the International Centre
for Sports History and Culture at De Montfort University,
Leicester, UK. He is the author of Sport and Society in Modern
France (1981), Sport and the British: A modern history (1989)
and Sport in Britain: 1945–2000 (2000, jointly with Tony Mason). He
has co-edited several essay collections, most recently Sport and
the Transformation of Europe (2011, jointly with Christopher Young
and Alan Tomlinson) and has published extensively in a wide range
of academic journals. He is a former Director of the International
Master in Humanities, Management and Law of Sports programme at De
Montfort University.
Dino Ruta is Professor of Human Resources and Sport Management at
SDA Bocconi School of Management, Italy. He is Scientific Director
of the FIFA International Master in Humanities, Management and Law
of Sports, and Director of the Sport Knowledge Center at SDA
Bocconi School of Management. He is also Director of the Master in
Organization and Human Resources Management at
Bocconi University. His research activities are focused on
people strategy, leadership and sport management. He has been
invited to present his research in Argentina, South Africa, Turkey,
the United Arab Emirates and the USA. He also works with CEOs and
leadership teams in aligning people and business strategy. He
has published in leading academic journals such as Human Resource
Management and the International Journal of Human Resource
Management. He is the author of Leading Teams (2013, with P.
Guenzi).
James Panter is Research Officer at the International Centre for
Sports History and Culture, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK.
He also co-ordinates the International MA in Management, Law and
Humanities of Sport which is delivered in partnership with the
Centre International d’Etude du Sport, SDA Bocconi School of
Management and University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland. He has worked
on a number of international sports research projects and has a
wide knowledge of contemporary sport.
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