Olympic Tourism
By Mike Weed
Published November 1st 2007 by Routledge – 256 pages
Olympic Tourism is the first text to focus on the nature of Olympic tourism and the potential for the Olympic Games to generate tourism in the run up to and long after the hosting of a Games. The awarding of the 2012 Olympics to London will see an increasing interest in the phenomena of organising, managing and analysing the issues which surround mega-event sport tourism. This text will address these issues and using detailed case analysis of previous and future games, discuss how to maximise the success of managing tourism at these events. Written from an international perspective this text provides the reader with:
Olympic Tourism is a timely response to this international interest and will be an essential resource for those studying and teaching on sport, tourism and the Olympics.
Foreword; PART ONE; Chapter One – Sport, Tourism & the Olympic Games; Chapter Two – Who are Olympic Tourists?; Chapter Three – The Detail of Olympic Tourism; Chapter Four – Leveraging Olympic Tourism; Chapter Five – Planning for Olympic Tourism; PART TWO; Chapter Six – The Winter Olympic Games; Chapter Seven – The Games of the XXVII Olympiad in Sydney (2000); Chapter Eight – The Games of the XXVIII Olympiad in Athens (2004); Chapter Nine – The Games of the XXIX Olympiad in Beijing (2008); Chapter Ten – The Games of the XXX Olympiad in London (2012); Afterword; References
Professor Mike Weed is Director of the Centre for Sport, Physical Education andActivity Research (SPEAR) and Faculty Research Director for the Faculty of Social andApplied Sciences at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK. He is Editor of the Journal of Sport and Tourism and author of Olympic Tourism (Elsevier)
Name: Olympic Tourism (Hardback) – Routledge
Description: By Mike Weed. Olympic Tourism is the first text to focus on the nature of Olympic tourism and the potential for the Olympic Games to generate tourism in the run up to and long after the hosting of a Games. The awarding of the 2012 Olympics to London will see an...
Categories: Sport Tourism, Olympics and Paralympics