Spelling suggestions: "subject:"world cup"" "subject:"orld cup""
41 |
The 2014 Brazilian World Cup: Consequences and LegaciesRonquillo, Elissa Josefina 20 April 2012 (has links)
Sport is often not a topic one contemplates of when thinking of global and national narratives. For many it is not a valid or significant tool to study race or development. Sport has been minimized to an after school activity or a distraction, but sport crosses many spheres including, but not limited to, politics and identity. It has the capability of influencing people’s histories and growth as an individual. Many scholars have in recent years used the politics of sport as a legitimate way to understand race and global history. The 2014 World Cup presented itself as the perfect subject to analyze various meanings driving the political, economic, and global significance of mega sports events. Brazil’s history with football and the inter-connectedness with politics, nationalism, and racial identity provide an interesting platform to dissect this information and place it in a larger scope within the values of the World Cup. Upon exploration of this topic and several meetings with Professor David Goldblatt, author of the must-read soccer Bible The Ball is Round, I found that the World Cup was exuding with political, economic, and social implications. A few main issues caught my attention: The massive corruption and lawlessness with which FIFA elites seem to operate under, the unbelievable accounts of housing and human rights violations done in the name of football by the Brazilian government, and the inefficient and slow progress of infrastructure preparations.
|
42 |
South Africa 2010 and beyond : A study of how the 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup affects South Africa's environmental effortsSvensson, Sofia January 2009 (has links)
<p>The study investigates South Africa’s actions and efforts within environmental and climate issues in relation to the country’s hosting of the 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup. The investigation is conducted by applying idea analysis on the empirical material in order to highlight what ideas South Africa might have when it comes to environmental and climate related measures in connection to the World Cup. The two theories of Behavioralism and Rational Choice are to be compared in order to reveal the true reasons for South Africa’s environmental actions. In addition, an own-formulated hypothesis which claims that measures within environmental issues are improved due to the 2010 World Cup is tested against the empirical material. Results are presented as a review over what is being done today within environmental and climate issues in South Africa and these answers are then connected to the World Cup as it is analyzed concerning how the event affects the country’s policies and efforts within these areas. Finally, a concluding discussion states what role environmental and climate issues have in connection to a major sporting event such as the 2010 FIFA World Cup and how South Africa administers this opportunity to act accordingly and present itself to the rest of the world.</p>
|
43 |
Global fetishism : dynamics of transnational performances in contemporary South Korea / Dynamics of transnational performances in contemporary South KoreaLee, Hyunjung, 1977- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Using South Korea's transnational performances as a case-study, this dissertation examines the cultural implications of the much-celebrated Korean model of national development. Starting with two contemporary South Korean performances--The Last Empress, the Musical (1995), and Nanta [Cookin'] (1997), a nonverbal performance--I explore how the producers' commitments to South Korea's cultural development are manifested in these productions. Situating these performances within the South Korean social context of the mid-1990s, I explore how the reinvention of Korean traditional cultures represents both national capacity and responds to calls for globalism without losing Korean identity. In the first chapter, my analysis of The Last Empress illustrates how local desire for global success resulted in a perpetuation of a Broadway-style musical in a Korean mode. I argue that, while the play utilizes its female character's pioneering image to claim a place for the musical in the global era, it simultaneously pulls her back into the traditional domain. With Nanta [Cookin'] in the following chapter, I argue that the production's commercial accomplishment lies in its strategic blending of pan-Asian cultural elements and the use of food without language which well co-operated with the burgeoning cultural tourism industry in South Korea. Extending my argument further, I conclude with an analysis of global-national interplay as they were played out at the 2002 Korea-Japan World Cup. As a way of understanding the nationalistic fervor during the event, I suggest that the mass festive rally functions as a "social performance." In these performances, Korean nationalism, conjoined with global desire, was reconfigured through spontaneous gatherings, styles, fashions, expressions, and gestures. Like its theatrical counterparts, the World Cup rally insists on Korean-ness as what qualifies South Korea to be a global player. I conclude by offering the concept, "global fetishism," to explicate the complex and even contradictory assimilation of the national into the global in these performances. They are showcases for how globalization taps into the local rhetoric of development, charged by South Korea's inherent nationalism. If for South Korea "global" is synonymous with glamorous cultural success, in each context it is precisely the return to the local which permits global fetishism. / text
|
44 |
Local resident perceptions of the impacts of the FIFA Confederations Cup 2009 within the City of Tshwane.Manjule, Asselina Da Felicidade. January 2013 (has links)
M. Tech. Tourism and Hospitality Management / South Africa has been the world's stage in hosting major and mega sport events that drew the world's attention such as the legacy of the Rugby World Cup 1995, the Cricket World Cup in 2003, the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Confederations Cup 2009 and the latest FIFA World Cup 2010 which are also examples of the opportunities provided by major and mega events. Such as in many cities, destination marketing organizations have engaged in the systematic planning, development, and marketing of events as tourist attractions, image-makers, or catalysts for other developments however, the involvement of local residents in the planning and operational stages is often neglected. Therefore, this study has been conceived to focus on the local resident's perceptions of the impacts of the Confederations Cup 2009 within the City of Tshwane (Metropolitan Municipality).
|
45 |
Upgrading the Caledonian football stadium in Pretoria.Armstrong, Robert Scott. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (MTech. degree in Architecture (Professional) / In view of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the study examines the need of the touring national soccer teams to have access to training grounds and base camps for their duration of stay in South Africa. Host stadiums will be used exclusively for match day events and training venues will have to be found elsewhere. In this study a proposal is set forth to modernise the Caledonian football grounds into a contemporary, world-class football stadium in preparation for the World Cup. The proposal is for a development according to the 'legacy' system, whereby the facility targets the requirements of the local Arcadia Shepherds Football club, but maintains the potential to be leased as a training ground by partaking teams in the 2010 event, to recuperate the finances required for constructing such a building.
|
46 |
Sport and the Making of World Cities: A Case Study of South AfricaPlenderleith, Lisa 09 December 2013 (has links)
This thesis explores two distinctive ways in which sport is deployed as a development strategy in South Africa, and specifically considers how sport may play a role in the configuration of the nation’s cities. First, a case study of the sporting mega-event, the 2010 FIFA World Cup, is presented. It is posited that this tournament was a speculative world-making strategy aimed at elevating host cities and the nation to world-class status. Second, a discourse analysis of South African policy documents regarding the reintroduction of physical education is performed. It is argued that despite the fundamental neoliberal elements of physical education, there is a possibility that if the government maximizes certain opportunities, it could be a way of forging ordinary cities that are based upon equitable access to sport for South African children. These assessments suggest that sport can play a role in both the spatial and symbolic development of cities.
|
47 |
Sport and the Making of World Cities: A Case Study of South AfricaPlenderleith, Lisa 09 December 2013 (has links)
This thesis explores two distinctive ways in which sport is deployed as a development strategy in South Africa, and specifically considers how sport may play a role in the configuration of the nation’s cities. First, a case study of the sporting mega-event, the 2010 FIFA World Cup, is presented. It is posited that this tournament was a speculative world-making strategy aimed at elevating host cities and the nation to world-class status. Second, a discourse analysis of South African policy documents regarding the reintroduction of physical education is performed. It is argued that despite the fundamental neoliberal elements of physical education, there is a possibility that if the government maximizes certain opportunities, it could be a way of forging ordinary cities that are based upon equitable access to sport for South African children. These assessments suggest that sport can play a role in both the spatial and symbolic development of cities.
|
48 |
Ishockey-VM 2013 : En studie baserad på världsmästerskap inom ishockey och dess marknadsföringNyberg, Sandra, Gebara, Sandra January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
|
49 |
Mega sports event policy in Marseille 1991-2003 the football World Cup and the Americas Cup : a case study of urban governanceCometti, Aurelie January 2007 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to provide a theoretically informed account of the decision-making process in mega sports events policy in Marseille. This is intended to allow an evaluation of the major theoretical frameworks developed in the Anglo-Saxon literature on urban governance and their applicability to the French local government context, and more specifically to the context of sports policy in Marseille. Following an analysis of the development of the local political culture of Marseille, the thesis undertakes a review of theoretical frameworks developed in the urban policy literature identifying three major approaches / concepts which have dominated Anglo-Saxon literature, namely the growth coalition (Logan and Molotch 1987), policy network (Rhodes 1981; 1988), and urban regime (Stone 1989) approaches. These theoretical frameworks have been little used in French urban policy literature (Le Gales 1995; 2003) and feature rarely, if at all, in French sports policy literature. In reviewing this literature the thesis identifies a set of indicators, which may be used in empirical contexts to differentiate growth coalitions from policy networks and urban regimes. A major question for the research is thus to what extent Anglo-Saxon theoretical frameworks / concepts can be usefully employed to understand French decision-making and that of Marseille in particular. Subscribing to critical realism, the thesis aims to give an account of the mega sport event phenomena in Marseille, and of the actors' understanding and interpretation (in effect their social construction) of the phenomena. The data collected were documents for the period 1991 - 2003 from official sources (minutes and proceedings of local government and event-related bodies, reports, political speeches, and local government publications), local press coverage, and interviewees conducted with the major decision-makers. An ethnographic content analysis was made, partly employing a deductive approach based on the set of common indicators developed from the review of urban policy, and partly inductively from themes, which emerged in the analysis (Altheide 1996). The thesis concludes that while there is some evidence of the development of policy networks the specificity of the French context, and that of Marseille, with its heavily state-led approach to policy, means that the use of urban regime, and still less of growth coalition approaches, is not warranted by the evidence.
|
50 |
O saldo da Copa do Mundo : os impactos sociais da renovação urbana em Itaquera - São Paulo /Marangoni, Cecília Stephllay. January 2017 (has links)
Orientador: Gustavo José de Toledo Pedroso / Resumo: A cidade moderna, tal qual conhecemos, tem seu desenvolvimento iniciado com os processos de industrialização. Ela desenha-se a partir de seus atributos culturais, comerciais, políticos e econômicos. Nesse sentido, o solo urbano torna-se local de disputa e geração de lucro o que acarreta a mercantilização dos espaços. Mediante tal fenômeno, tem-se materializada nos espaços urbanos, uma disputa que ultrapassa o campo simbólico – a luta de classes. Em questão urbana, denomina-se tal conjuntura como apontando para a segregação sócio espacial. Quando a cidade congrega regiões díspares, com atributos diferenciados relativos a condições mais dignas de vida, e em tal função seu valor cresce exponencialmente, a luta em solo urbano torna-se expressão da questão social, condicionando aqueles que vivem do trabalho, e consequentemente com rendas salariais inferiores se aglutinarem em torno ou em regiões afastadas onde a condição digna de vida permanece aquém da qualidade. Esse cenário é latente na cidade de São Paulo, que mesmo sendo a maior metrópole da América Latina apresenta índices altíssimos de insalubridade e déficit habitacionais. É por este caminho que essa pesquisa se debruça sobre uma análise que corresponda em quais sentidos a vida e a rotina dos moradores de Itaquera, Zona Leste de São Paulo foram prejudicadas em função das obras para Copa do Mundo em 2014. / Abstract: The modern city, as we know it, has its development begun with the processes of industrialization. It draws from its cultural, commercial, political and economic attributes. In this sense, the urban soil becomes a place of dispute and profit generation, which leads to the commodification of the spaces. Through such a phenomenon, it has materialized in urban spaces, a dispute that goes beyond the symbolic field - the class struggle. In urban question, it is called such conjuncture as pointing to the socio-spatial segregation. When the city congregates disparate regions, with differentiated attributes relative to more dignified conditions of life, and in that function its value grows exponentially, the struggle in urban soil becomes an expression of the social question, conditioning those who live from work, and consequently with Lower wages come together around or in remote regions where the dignified condition of life remains below quality. This scenario is latent in the city of São Paulo, which, although being the largest metropolis in Latin America, has extremely high rates of unhealthiness and housing deficits. It is on this path that this research focuses on an analysis that corresponds in what sense the life and routine of the residents of Itaquera, East Zone of São Paulo were hampered due to the works for World Cup in 2014. / Mestre
|
Page generated in 0.0444 seconds