The Beijing Winter Olympics is different! Or is it?: integration and revalidation of residents’ mega-event perceptions and support models

PurposeThis study aims to integrate and revalidate previously proposed various structural models in understanding residents’ attitudes and behaviors in relation to mega-events before the events.Design/methodology/approachThis study focussed on the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and used a questionnair...

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Veröffentlicht in:International Journal of Tourism Cities 2023-11, Vol.9 (3), p.534-551
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Ning (Chris), Chen, Xi, Hall, Colin Michael, Li, Biyun, Wang, Xueli, Wang, Lingen
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container_end_page 551
container_issue 3
container_start_page 534
container_title International Journal of Tourism Cities
container_volume 9
creator Chen, Ning (Chris)
Chen, Xi
Hall, Colin Michael
Li, Biyun
Wang, Xueli
Wang, Lingen
description PurposeThis study aims to integrate and revalidate previously proposed various structural models in understanding residents’ attitudes and behaviors in relation to mega-events before the events.Design/methodology/approachThis study focussed on the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and used a questionnaire-based quantitative survey prior these events. A PLS-SEM analysis was run on a sample of 473 residents, in testing relationships between residents’ trust, perceived impacts, support for hosting and subjective well-being.FindingsResults revalidate propositions from previous research, but suggest key contextual differences in light of biosecurity risks. Residents’ perceived positive (cultural) and negative (environmental) impacts affect their support for mega-events, and their perceived positive (economic and cultural) and negative (social) impacts affect their subjective well-being. Variances in the relationships were found for those who perceive a high biosecurity risk.Research limitations/implicationsThe data were collected from one mega-event, and thus the findings of this study are highly contextualized.Practical implicationsThis research suggest that mega-event organizers should put effort into promoting the benefits of hosting mega-events and work collaboratively with stakeholders to reduce potential negative costs and risks as well as increase resident well-being via bringing in economic and cultural benefits.Social implicationsThis research focusses on social well-being during and post COVID in relation to the hosting of a mega-event.Originality/valueThe data were collected from the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, a mega-event that, because of COVID-19 and restricted spectator flows, potentially had characteristics quite different from that of other Winter Olympics or sporting mega-events.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/IJTC-06-2022-0153
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subjects Biosecurity
Community
Costs
COVID-19
Hypotheses
Olympic games
Pandemics
Perceptions
Quality of life
Social capital
Social exchange theory
title The Beijing Winter Olympics is different! Or is it?: integration and revalidation of residents’ mega-event perceptions and support models
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