Hollow sovereignty and the hollow Crown? Contested governance and the Olympic security edifice
Hollow sovereignty and the hollow Crown? Contested governance and the Olympic security edifice
In this chapter, Fussey and Coaffee assess the form, impact and lasting ‘legacy’ of security practices associated with hosting the 2012 Olympic Games in London. It examines imbrications of formal security plans, comprising state and private sector actors and agencies, with more indirect and informal securitising processes such as diverse territorially based regulatory regimes and the creation of ‘regenerated’ spaces that are hardened and insulated against the urban milieu in which they are situated. Mega–event security is often characterised as an exceptional exercise in terms of scale, scope and form, and considered variously through macro-theoretical lenses citing the assertion of overarching disciplinary, neoliberal, colonial corporatist and other interest–based aspirations. This chapter argues that whilst such explanations have much to offer, Olympic security practices comprise a multiplicity of ambitions, ordering processes and path dependencies that, as they converge on the Olympic city, do not necessarily cohere and are often in tension with one another. Such processes illuminate the complex and contested governance of Olympic security and also the multiple overt and subtle ways post–Olympics security legacies become embedded in the urban landscape.
53–87
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Coaffee, Jon
2b2d17da-b76e-4edc-bfb7-8800270c3f11
9 August 2017
Fussey, Pete
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Coaffee, Jon
2b2d17da-b76e-4edc-bfb7-8800270c3f11
Fussey, Pete and Coaffee, Jon
(2017)
Hollow sovereignty and the hollow Crown? Contested governance and the Olympic security edifice.
In,
Cohen, P and Watt, P
(eds.)
London 2012 and the Post-Olympics City: A Hollow Legacy?
London.
Palgrave Macmillan, .
(doi:10.1057/978-1-137-48947-0_3).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
In this chapter, Fussey and Coaffee assess the form, impact and lasting ‘legacy’ of security practices associated with hosting the 2012 Olympic Games in London. It examines imbrications of formal security plans, comprising state and private sector actors and agencies, with more indirect and informal securitising processes such as diverse territorially based regulatory regimes and the creation of ‘regenerated’ spaces that are hardened and insulated against the urban milieu in which they are situated. Mega–event security is often characterised as an exceptional exercise in terms of scale, scope and form, and considered variously through macro-theoretical lenses citing the assertion of overarching disciplinary, neoliberal, colonial corporatist and other interest–based aspirations. This chapter argues that whilst such explanations have much to offer, Olympic security practices comprise a multiplicity of ambitions, ordering processes and path dependencies that, as they converge on the Olympic city, do not necessarily cohere and are often in tension with one another. Such processes illuminate the complex and contested governance of Olympic security and also the multiple overt and subtle ways post–Olympics security legacies become embedded in the urban landscape.
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Published date: 9 August 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 495103
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495103
PURE UUID: c070f8be-d022-4b76-b361-36239bf9ffd2
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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2024 17:41
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 03:13
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Contributors
Author:
Pete Fussey
Author:
Jon Coaffee
Editor:
P Cohen
Editor:
P Watt
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