Managing and Developing Communities, Festivals and Events (eBook)
XIX, 241 Seiten
Palgrave Macmillan UK (Verlag)
978-1-137-50855-3 (ISBN)
The different stages of a festival's evolution provide a plethora of opportunities for us to better understand our culture, the relationships we build, what we value in our culture and our communities, and how we socialize and interact with one another. Managing and Developing Community Festivals and Events brings together community festival and event research from nine different countries. It critically explores how festivals and their communities develop and impact upon one another. The chapters focus on a wide range of festivals such as food and culinary festivals, art events, religious pilgrimage and feast festivals, as well as a variety of diverse themes such as joy, civil unrest, preservation of cultures and authenticity.
Allan Jepson is a senior academic in Event Management & Tourism, and researcher within the Marketing Insight research Group (MIRU) at the University of Hertfordshire in the UK. Allan currently serves as a reviewer for the International Journal of Culture, Tourism & Hospitality Research, Marketing Intelligence and Planning and the Journal of Policy Research in Tourism, Leisure and Events. His research with Alan Clarke explores power, hegemony and decision making processes that produce community cultural events, community engagement within the planning process, and the impact that festivals and events have upon overall quality of life. Allan is also Vice-Chair for the Association of Events Management Education (AEME).
Alan Clarke is a Docens in the Faculty of Business and Economics at University of Pannonia, Hungary. He has been part of the research team undertaking a yearlong review and evaluation of the festivals and events in Veszprém for the Tourism Destination Management Organisation and is currently working on new offers, such as the Auer Festival. Previously he was the Assistant Dean in the Business School, and in the School of Tourism and Hospitality at the University of Derby, UK. He chaired the Derby Tourism Challenge Team, was Vice-Chair of the Derbyshire Tourism Partnership and was the founding chair of the Derbyshire and Peak District Sustainable Partnership.The different stages of a festival's evolution provide a plethora of opportunities for us to better understand our culture, the relationships we build, what we value in our culture and our communities, and how we socialize and interact with one another. Managing and Developing Community Festivals and Events brings together community festival and event research from nine different countries. It critically explores how festivals and their communities develop and impact upon one another. The chapters focus on a wide range of festivals such as food and culinary festivals, art events, religious pilgrimage and feast festivals, as well as a variety of diverse themes such as joy, civil unrest, preservation of cultures and authenticity.
Allan Jepson is a senior academic in Event Management & Tourism, and researcher within the Marketing Insight research Group (MIRU) at the University of Hertfordshire in the UK. Allan currently serves as a reviewer for the International Journal of Culture, Tourism & Hospitality Research, Marketing Intelligence and Planning and the Journal of Policy Research in Tourism, Leisure and Events. His research with Alan Clarke explores power, hegemony and decision making processes that produce community cultural events, community engagement within the planning process, and the impact that festivals and events have upon overall quality of life. Allan is also Vice-Chair for the Association of Events Management Education (AEME). Alan Clarke is a Docens in the Faculty of Business and Economics at University of Pannonia, Hungary. He has been part of the research team undertaking a yearlong review and evaluation of the festivals and events in Veszprém for the Tourism Destination Management Organisation and is currently working on new offers, such as the Auer Festival. Previously he was the Assistant Dean in the Business School, and in the School of Tourism and Hospitality at the University of Derby, UK. He chaired the Derby Tourism Challenge Team, was Vice-Chair of the Derbyshire Tourism Partnership and was the founding chair of the Derbyshire and Peak District Sustainable Partnership.
PART I: INVESTIGATING MANAGEMENT PHILOSOPHIES, IDEAS, AND PRINCIPLES IN THE CONTEXT OF FESTIVALS, EVENTS, AND COMMUNITIES1. An Introduction to Planning, design, and management of community festivals and events; Allan Jepson & Alan Clarke2. Rising to the Challenge of Sustainable Community Events by the Community, For the Community; James Bostock, Richard Cooper & Gareth Roberts 3. Co-creating Places through Events. The Case of a Tourism Community Event in Finnish Lapland; Minni Haanpää, José-Carlos García-Rosell, & Seija Tuulentie 4. The motivations of event volunteers at local events; David Lamb & Alfred Ogle 5. Museum events as a tool for community and organisational development; Valery Gordin & Mariya Dedova 6. The 'Performance of an Easter festival on an island community: Bringing communities together or entertaining tourists?; Nigel Morpeth 7. Community Development through Public Art Event in Ratchaburi, Thailand; Sompong Amnuay-ngerntra 8. Understanding Stakeholder Status and Legitimate Power Exertion within Community Sport Events: A Case Study of the Christchurch (New Zealand) City to Surf; Rachel J. Batty 9. Events: cause or consequence of community involvement; Egbert van der Zee & Pepijn OldersPART II: PLANNING AND MANAGING THE IMPACTS OF FESTIVALS, EVENTS, AND COMMUNITIES10. The rediscovery of an ancient community event in a language minority village: the case of Bova (Italy); Sonia Ferrari & Pasquale Faenza 11. Indulgence feasts: manifestation of religious and communal identity; Darius Liutikas 12. Developing a Community Festival Amidst Civil Unrest; Adrian Devine, Frances Devine, & Clare Carruthers13. Community Food Festivals and Events In The South West Of England, UK; Paul Cleave 14. Creating Joy Association: A Social Imperative; Neil Cameron & Steve Brown 15. Girona and its culinary events; Silvia Aulet and Joaquim Majó16. Conclusions and future research agenda's in managing and developing communities, festivals, and events; Allan Jepson & Alan Clarke
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 29.4.2016 |
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Zusatzinfo | XIX, 241 p. |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Philosophie ► Allgemeines / Lexika |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Ethnologie ► Volkskunde | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Planung / Organisation | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Unternehmensführung / Management | |
Schlagworte | Arts • Community • Development • event construction • Events • Festivals • food festivals • Identity • impacts • Management • Minority • Organisation • organization • Planning • Research • Rituals • Stakeholder • Traditions |
ISBN-10 | 1-137-50855-8 / 1137508558 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-137-50855-3 / 9781137508553 |
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