South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

This groundbreaking book provides a critically informed analysis of the impact and legacy of mega-sporting events through the lens of South Africa's 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup and its associated developmental paradigm. It challenges mainstream thinking and mega-event praise singers by providing concrete evidence to show that this sporting spectacular was little more than a front for massive accumulation and extraction of wealth, alongside increased sporting and socio-economic inequality.

Contributors to this volume examine the sports accumulation-complex, economic promises, construction companies, trade unions, strikes, international solidarity, the struggle to trade, sex work, climate change, as well as case studies on the building of individual soccer stadiums.

Eddie Cottle is the regional policy and campaign officer of the Building and Wood Workers' international (BWI) for Africa and the Middle East.

This is a timely reminder that the 2010 World Cup nation-building illusion in fact disguised a reality of greed, elite enrichment and nepotism - and left us with a terrible financial hangover.'

Terry Bell, columnist at Independent Newspapers, Business Report, and independent economic/labour analyst

1111605674
South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

This groundbreaking book provides a critically informed analysis of the impact and legacy of mega-sporting events through the lens of South Africa's 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup and its associated developmental paradigm. It challenges mainstream thinking and mega-event praise singers by providing concrete evidence to show that this sporting spectacular was little more than a front for massive accumulation and extraction of wealth, alongside increased sporting and socio-economic inequality.

Contributors to this volume examine the sports accumulation-complex, economic promises, construction companies, trade unions, strikes, international solidarity, the struggle to trade, sex work, climate change, as well as case studies on the building of individual soccer stadiums.

Eddie Cottle is the regional policy and campaign officer of the Building and Wood Workers' international (BWI) for Africa and the Middle East.

This is a timely reminder that the 2010 World Cup nation-building illusion in fact disguised a reality of greed, elite enrichment and nepotism - and left us with a terrible financial hangover.'

Terry Bell, columnist at Independent Newspapers, Business Report, and independent economic/labour analyst

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South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

South Africa's World Cup: A Legacy for Whom?

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Overview

This groundbreaking book provides a critically informed analysis of the impact and legacy of mega-sporting events through the lens of South Africa's 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup and its associated developmental paradigm. It challenges mainstream thinking and mega-event praise singers by providing concrete evidence to show that this sporting spectacular was little more than a front for massive accumulation and extraction of wealth, alongside increased sporting and socio-economic inequality.

Contributors to this volume examine the sports accumulation-complex, economic promises, construction companies, trade unions, strikes, international solidarity, the struggle to trade, sex work, climate change, as well as case studies on the building of individual soccer stadiums.

Eddie Cottle is the regional policy and campaign officer of the Building and Wood Workers' international (BWI) for Africa and the Middle East.

This is a timely reminder that the 2010 World Cup nation-building illusion in fact disguised a reality of greed, elite enrichment and nepotism - and left us with a terrible financial hangover.'

Terry Bell, columnist at Independent Newspapers, Business Report, and independent economic/labour analyst


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781869142162
Publisher: University of Kwazulu-Natal Press
Publication date: 09/01/2011
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 6.60(w) x 9.40(h) x 0.80(d)

Table of Contents

Foreword Crecentia Mofokeng ix

Acknowledgements xi

Abbreviations xv

Introduction Eddie Cottle 1

1 FIFA and the Sports-Accumulation Complex Dale T. McKinley 13

2 Economic Promises and Pitfalls of South Africa's World Cup Patrick Bond Eddie Cottle 39

3 Their Cup Runneth Over: Construction Companies and the 2010 FIFA World Cup Michelle Taal 73

4 Scoring an Own Goal? The Construction Workers' 2010 World Cup Strike Eddie Cottle 101

5 The Trade Union Legacy of the World Cup: International Solidarity Revitalised Vasco Pedrina Joachim Merz 117

6 Informal Traders and the Struggle to Trade Pat Horn 133

7 Lies, Misrepresentation and Unfulfilled Expectations: Sex Work and the 2010 Soccer World Cup Vivienne Mentor-Lalu 159

8 Washing FIFA Green: The World Cup and Global Warming Tristen Taylor 175

9 Soccer City: Who Drank All the Beer from the Calabash? Mondli Hlatshwayo 193

10 Green Point Stadium: FIFA's Legacy of Unfair Play Mondli Hlatshuiayo Michael Blake 225

11 Tall Tales: Dissecting the Urban Legend of the Developmental Legacy of Durban's Moses Mabhida Stadium Aisha Bahadur 255

12 Mbombela: Corruption, Murder, False Promises and Resistance Dale T. McKinley 281

13 Building Coliseums, Living in Shacks: Construction Workers in the Shadow of the World-Class City Tony Roshan Samara 313

Contributors 331

Index 337

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