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Vancouver's Promise of the World's First Sustainable Olympic Games

Meg Holden, Julia MacKenzie and Robert VanWynsberghe
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Meg Holden: Urban Studies Program, Simon Fraser University, 3rd Floor, 515 West Hastings Street, Vancouver, BC V6B 5K3, Canada
Julia MacKenzie: Jacques Whitfod, 3 Spectacle Lake Drive, Dartmouth, NS B3B 1W8, Canada
Robert VanWynsberghe: Department of Human Kinetics, University of British Columbia, 210-6081 University Boulevard, Vancouver, BC V6P 1Z1, Canada

Environment and Planning C, 2008, vol. 26, issue 5, 882-905

Abstract: Vancouver has committed to host the world's first sustainable Olympic Games in 2010. This promise is in keeping with local policy trends in the Vancouver region toward visions of sustainability and with growing attention by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to environmental sustainability concerns. We demonstrate that interests in sustainability at local and international scales may differ markedly, however, resulting in a range of possible legacies for Vancouver and the international Olympic movement from the 2010 Winter Olympics. To move beyond the fruitless search for a universally acceptable definition of sustainability, we investigate different meanings of sustainability using the tool of the ‘language game’, originally devised by philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. Examining sustainability as a language game in the planning phase of the 2010 Olympics allows us to consider the potential and likely scenarios for sustainability wins and losses, internationally and in the local context. Four possible scenarios are considered. In the most optimistic scenario, sustainability language converges across the international and local language systems, aiding the development of sustainability in Vancouver policy, charting a course for Olympic cities to follow, and creating institutional change within the IOC as well. In the contrasting scenario, the failure to find common ground in sustainability pursuits could doom the concept both for future Olympic cities and for policy practice in Vancouver. Two other mixed outcome scenarios are considered as well. This analysis leads to insight into the boundaries of the meaning of sustainability in the context of a megaevent, in which, more than any particular demonstration project, the communicated message of sustainability may be the most lasting legacy.

Date: 2008
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