Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities

The objectives for this research project were to examine the quality and type of support offered to community events through a case study of two neighbouring councils in the North Island of New Zealand; and to determine the impacts of events staged in the communities of both councils, including the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joany Grima
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2019-04-01
Series:Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://10.44.10.24:8080/index.php/cjlg/article/view/6518
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spelling doaj-d474083817a34561ae85d048c3d4a87b2020-11-25T00:52:35ZengUTS ePRESSCommonwealth Journal of Local Governance1836-03942019-04-012110.5130/cjlg.v0i21.65186518Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring citiesJoany Grima0School of Business Wellington Institute of Technology Wellington New Zealand The objectives for this research project were to examine the quality and type of support offered to community events through a case study of two neighbouring councils in the North Island of New Zealand; and to determine the impacts of events staged in the communities of both councils, including their influence on social capital building. The study found that both councils are supportive of the delivery of events by both council and non-council event organisers. The councils are providing human, financial and physical capital to enable the output of events. Event impacts – specifically social and economic impacts – were considered to be positive in nature. However, there is scope for greater strategic planning around community event delivery both by individual authorities and collaboratively, including the establishment of formal monitoring and evaluation systems. There is also scope to incorporate key lessons in regard to good practice, as identified by this study. http://10.44.10.24:8080/index.php/cjlg/article/view/6518Local governmentCommunityNew ZealandEvents
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joany Grima
spellingShingle Joany Grima
Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
Local government
Community
New Zealand
Events
author_facet Joany Grima
author_sort Joany Grima
title Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
title_short Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
title_full Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
title_fullStr Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
title_full_unstemmed Local government and community events in New Zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
title_sort local government and community events in new zealand: a case study of two neighbouring cities
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
issn 1836-0394
publishDate 2019-04-01
description The objectives for this research project were to examine the quality and type of support offered to community events through a case study of two neighbouring councils in the North Island of New Zealand; and to determine the impacts of events staged in the communities of both councils, including their influence on social capital building. The study found that both councils are supportive of the delivery of events by both council and non-council event organisers. The councils are providing human, financial and physical capital to enable the output of events. Event impacts – specifically social and economic impacts – were considered to be positive in nature. However, there is scope for greater strategic planning around community event delivery both by individual authorities and collaboratively, including the establishment of formal monitoring and evaluation systems. There is also scope to incorporate key lessons in regard to good practice, as identified by this study.
topic Local government
Community
New Zealand
Events
url http://10.44.10.24:8080/index.php/cjlg/article/view/6518
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