WORLD CUP LEGACY AND PERTAINING IMPACTS ON SÃO PAULO CITY´S FUTURE

Authors

  • Marcos Vinicius Cardoso Universidade de São Paulo
  • João Manuel Malaia Universidade Nove de Julho
  • Fernando A Fleury Universidade Nove de Julho

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24023/FutureJournal/2175-5825/2013.v5i1.134

Abstract

Legacies – structures that are built for events and which remain after the same - are one of the major positive aspects paraded by mega sporting events organizers. This study´s purpose is to analyze the current situation of legacies promised by the many governmental instances for the city of São Paulo - host city of Fifa´s 2014 World Cup – and prospect which legacies will become effective in the city. Preliminary assessments may raise construction concerns, alert the public to keep an eye on undertaken obligations and encourage official actions (Mangan, 2008, p. 1,871). Data was obtained from National Audit Court (TCU) reports, Ministry and United Nations documents, in addition to testimonials and information gathered from some of Brazil´s major press media. Data analysis was conducted by classifying legacies according to tangible and intangible legacy concepts (Kaplanidou and Karadakis, 2010) followed by an analysis of promised legacies versus current status during the period of analysis. Finally, discussions as to most probable to come about legacies were presented. Results indicate that a portion of promised legacies stand a fair chance of achievement. On the other hand, other projects lag behind schedule or have been cancelled. Preliminary surveys suggest full completion of promised legacies is not possible, there has been an overuse of public resources as opposed to that planned, and provide indicatives as to the investment´s high opportunity cost.

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Published

2013-06-14

How to Cite

Cardoso, M. V., Malaia, J. M., & Fleury, F. A. (2013). WORLD CUP LEGACY AND PERTAINING IMPACTS ON SÃO PAULO CITY´S FUTURE. Future Studies Research Journal: Trends and Strategies, 5(1), 164–197. https://doi.org/10.24023/FutureJournal/2175-5825/2013.v5i1.134