Abstract
This paper critically analyses how event stakeholders perceived the governance of legacy at an edition of the Olympic Games. This discussion is based on case studies of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games and the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. The cases were built from archival materials and interview data, and analysed through content analysis. The findings illustrate how event stakeholders saw proper governance practices as essential for the provision of a positive and sustainable legacy and regularly associated it with the delivery of a successful event. In summary, accountability, participation, performance, and transparency could be used to promote ‘good’ governance practices for event legacy and act as a reassurance to both internal and external stakeholders that appropriate decision-making is being accomplished, at least in the cases examined in this research. However, it is important to understand that this approach is not a zero sum game and that decisions should balance the democratization of the governance process with the attainment of the governance system's legacy goals and objectives.
Notes on contributors
Dr. Becca Leopkey is an Assistant Professor of sport management at the University of Georgia. Her research focuses on the application of organization theory to better understand mega-sporting events and international sport organizations.
Milena M. Parent is an Associate Professor at the University of Ottawa and the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, as well as lecturing in the MEMOS program. She specializes in organization theory and strategic management applied to sports events, with a particular focus on stakeholder governance and network management.
ORCID
Milena M. Parent http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8789-3523