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Sport Event Tourism in Bucharest. UEFA EURO 2020 Case Study

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TLDR
In this article , an extended survey focusing on the autochthonous participants was applied to gather data and then further computed using SPSS software through crosstabulations and associated statistical analysis adapted for nominal and ordinal variables.
Abstract
Mega sport events were among the very few types of events still attracting tourists during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic and represented an exceptionally attractive tourism opportunity for Bucharest through the matches scheduled for the UEFA 2020 championship. Motivated by the novelty of the event which was organized for the first time in the Romanian capital city and motivated by the exceptionally restrictive context imposed by the sanitary crisis, the aim of this study was to analyze domestic tourist participation in and satisfaction with this event. An extended survey focusing on the autochthonous participants was applied to gather data and then further computed using SPSS software through crosstabulations and associated statistical analysis adapted for nominal and ordinal variables. The main results emphasize a large participation of Romanian football supporters who came specifically for the event. Most of them expressed dissatisfaction with souvenir, food and drink products sold within the stadium area but were satisfied with the COVID-19 measures and their costs. Supporters coming from rural areas opted for VFR accommodations while retirees and elderly supporters preferred hotels. Occupation and age were the main variables determining accommodation preferences as well as satisfaction with souvenir prices. These options may be valuable input for future adapted marketing strategies for sport event tourism in Romania. Lacking important urban tourist attractions and competing with other mature European urban destinations, mega sport events may represent an opportunity for autochthonous large cities to increase tourist attractiveness and maintain leisure travel even during periods of travel restrictions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Pandemics, tourism and global change: a rapid assessment of COVID-19

TL;DR: Why COVID-19 is an analogue to the ongoing climate crisis, and why there is a need to question the volume growth tourism model advocated by UNWTO, ICAO, CLIA, WTTC and other tourism organizations are discussed.
BookDOI

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TL;DR: Social Research in Changing Social Conditions Part One: DIRECTIONS in SOCIAL RESEARCH The End of the Paradigm Wars? - Alan Bryman The History of Social Research Methods - Marja Alastalo Assessing Validity in Social Research - Martyn Hammersley Ethnography and Audience - Karen Armstrong Social Research and Social Practice in Post-Positivist Society - Pekka Sulkunen From Questions of Methods to Epistemological Issues - Ann Nilsen The Case of Biographical Research Research Ethics in Social Science - Celia B. Fisher
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Critical reflections on the economic impact assessment of a mega-event: the case of 2002 FIFA World Cup

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report on the assessment of one such event, the 2002 FIFA World Cup in South Korea, using an estimation method that excluded tourists whose travel was non-event related.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why travel to the FIFA World Cup? Effects of motives, background, interest, and constraints

TL;DR: In a survey of 556 members of American soccer clubs prior to the FIFA World Cup, this article found that the level of fan motives, travel motivations, and the potential attendee's background had a significant impact on the likelihood of attending the event.
Journal ArticleDOI

Misinformation sharing and social media fatigue during COVID-19: An affordance and cognitive load perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how motivational factors and personal attributes influence social media fatigue and the sharing of unverified information during the COVID-19 pandemic, and they develop a model which they analyse using the structural equation modelling and neural network techniques with data collected from young adults in Bangladesh (N = 433).
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