2020
DOI: 10.3727/152599518x15403853721376
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Bouncing Back and Jumping Forward: Scoping the Resilience Landscape of International Sports Events And Implications for Events and Festivals

Abstract: The purpose of this conceptual article is to critically scope the resilience landscape to help better understand how future studies on international sports events and venues could be informed by existing work in disaster management and resilience studies. The article suggests that within the differing benchmarks currently used to define and classify major international sports events, at present crises and disaster management considerations are largely ignored or underestimated. The article reviews previous re… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Although some may argue that international sports events can be incorporated into notions of "organizational resilience" (Bhamra, 2016;Burnard & Bhamra, 2011), the premise of this article is to suggest there is a need to consider the concept of "Sport Event and Venue Resilience" given their criticality as CIs for sport event-based activity. This article follows the assertion of Shipway and Miles (2020) that future studies on ISEs and festivals more generally could be informed by existing work in disaster management and resilience studies. As such, this article will now further scope the resilience landscape in terms of future research agendas that may help us to further understand how both sport and event management studies more broadly, via specific reference to ISEs, could be informed by disaster management and resilience studies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Although some may argue that international sports events can be incorporated into notions of "organizational resilience" (Bhamra, 2016;Burnard & Bhamra, 2011), the premise of this article is to suggest there is a need to consider the concept of "Sport Event and Venue Resilience" given their criticality as CIs for sport event-based activity. This article follows the assertion of Shipway and Miles (2020) that future studies on ISEs and festivals more generally could be informed by existing work in disaster management and resilience studies. As such, this article will now further scope the resilience landscape in terms of future research agendas that may help us to further understand how both sport and event management studies more broadly, via specific reference to ISEs, could be informed by disaster management and resilience studies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…An initial review of literature on crisis and emergency management in sport (Shipway & Miles, 2020) indicated a relative paucity of studies. In the sport event management space, even where previous studies exist, they are often restricted to very limited development of conceptual frameworks that make almost passing analysis in relation to ISEs (see Shipway, 2018;Shipway & Miles, 2019).…”
Section: Paucity Of Studies On Managing Crises and Disasters For Spormentioning
confidence: 99%
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