The sustainability of the Youth Olympic Games: Stakeholder networks and institutional perspectives
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Date
2013-04-02Metadata
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Original version
International Review for the Sociology of Sport. 2013, under utgivelse. doi:10.1177/1012690213481467 10.1177/1012690213481467Abstract
This paper explored the Youth Olympic Games’ (YOG) potential sustainability (survival and
success) through an analysis of how actors exert various forms of pressure on the YOG. Given the
impact of the Olympic Games and of youth on society, it becomes important to study the newest
member of the Olympic Family. Combining stakeholder, network and institutional literatures, a
case study of the first Winter YOG in Innsbruck (Austria) was built by means of observations and
interviews. The stakeholder network analysis revealed three central stakeholders for the YOG’s
sustainability: the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the media (press and broadcast), and
the athletes’ parents. The institutional context was challenged by stakeholders’ changing levels
of relative saliency, and notably by the parents’ emerging saliency. Practically speaking, YOG
managers need to be diplomats in balancing pressures originating from the international (IOC)
and local (parents) institutional contexts.
Description
I Brage finner du siste tekst-versjon av artikkelen, og den kan inneholde ubetydelige forskjeller fra forlagets pdf-versjon. Forlagets pdf-versjon finner du på irs.sagepub.com: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690213481467 / In Brage you'll find the final text version of the article, and it may contain insignificant differences from the journal's pdf version. The original publication is available at irs.sagepub.com: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1012690213481467