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Viser: Event Studies
Event Studies
Donald Getz og Stephen J. Page
(2019)
Sprog: Engelsk
Detaljer om varen
- 4. Udgave
- Paperback: 558 sider
- Udgiver: Routledge (November 2019)
- Forfattere: Donald Getz og Stephen J. Page
- ISBN: 9780367085636
Event Studies is the only book devoted to developing knowledge and theory about planned events. It focuses on event planning and management, outcomes, the experience of events and the meanings attached to them, the dynamic processes shaping events and why people attend them.
This title draws from a large number of foundation disciplines and closely related professional fields to foster interdisciplinary theory focused on planned events. This revised edition has been updated to reflect and examine a number of substantial and important new ideas.
New to the fourth edition:
- new sections on the evolution of design theory, management, planning and marketing theory applied to events, sensory stimulation, leadership, and the nature of crises and security issues;
- new content on critical event studies and what this means for research and practice, the life-cycle model for event programming, and an action plan for how events can be a positive force in sustainable cities;
- new and additional case studies from a wide range of international events, and reviews of the evolving theory of contemporary research in events studies are included throughout.
This will be an invaluable resource for all undergraduate students of events studies throughout their degree programmes.
1. Introduction
and overview of event studies What is event studies? A framework for understanding and creating knowledge about planned events How the literature has evolved Major subdivisions (discourses) within event studies Forces, trends and issues
2. The world of planned events Describing and classifying events Planned versus unplanned events Description and examples of the major event forms Part 2 Foundation disciplines and closely related fields
3. The contribution of anthropology, sociology, philosophy, religious studies and psychology to event studies Introduction
Anthropology Sociology Philosophy Religious studies Psychology
4. The contribution of economics, management, political science, law, history, human geography and future studies to event studies Economics Management Political science Law History Human geography Future studies
5. The contribution of closely related professional fields to event studies Introduction
Leisure studies Tourism studies Hospitality studies Education and interpretation Communications, media and performance studies Arts and cultural management Cultural studies Sport management and sport studies Venue, club and assembly management Theatre studies Health studies Urban and community studies Rural studies Aboriginal, ethnic and multicultural studies Visitor studies Part 3 Framework for understanding and creating knowledge
6. The event experience and meanings Defining 'experience' A model of the planned event experience Generic and specific types of planned event experiences Meanings attached to planned event experiences
7. Event design What is design? Creativity and innovation Designing event settings Theming, programming and service design Evidence and research-based design
8. Antecedents and decision-making What are antecedents? Barriers and constraints Decision-making
9. Event management, planning and marketing Introduction
Leadership Inter-organizational behaviour and stakeholder management Planning and decision-making Operations and logistics Marketing and communications Resources and financial management Human resource management
10. Outcomes: evaluation and impact assessment Introduction
Key terms and concepts The forces-pressure-state-impact-response model (FPSIR) Logic and theory of change models Social outcomes Cultural outcomes Built-environment outcomes Nature and ecological processes Economic impacts Comprehensive benefit and cost evaluation
11. Events and public policy Public policy and events Justifying public-sector involvement Economic policy and events Cultural policy and events Social policy and events Environmental policy and events Public policy-making Part 4 Conclusion
12. Science, knowledge and theory for event studies Philosophy and knowledge Research methodologies Research, knowledge creation and theory development for event studies An agenda for research and theory development Future perspectives