Networks of Champions: Leadership, Access, and Advocacy in the U.S. House of Representatives. By Christine A. DeGregorio. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1997. 185p. $39.50 (original) (raw)
Geography Compass, 2018
This article reviews how sport has been engaged in urban geography and related fields. Across the social sciences, there has been an explosion of research on " sporting mega‐events, " such as the Olympics and FIFA World Cup. While much of this scholarship has examined the effects of these events for cities and city residents , I emphasize a longer and deeper history of research on sports and the city. I trace three lines of inquiry to illuminate the broader state of the field: (1) sport, (post)colonialism, and modernity; (2) sports, identity, and belonging in the city; and (3) sport, neoliberalism, and urban transformation. Not limited to the work of geographers, this review considers important overlaps between sports geography, urban geography, and a number of other disciplines. I suggest that sports studies has just as much to offer urban geography as the other way around, and in closing, I point to some key directions that might deepen urban geographers' contribution to the interdisciplinary research on sport, as well as critical approaches to urbanism.