Playing the shell game: the Faustian bargain for Dunedin's stadium Research Completed
Title
Playing the shell game: the Faustian bargain for Dunedin's stadium
Lead Author
Daniel Porter , Mike Sam
Organisation(s)
University of Otago
Publication Year
2013
Publisher
Routledge
Contacts
Mike Sam
email: mike.sam@otago.ac.nz
Abstract
This paper discusses the complex and complicit financial arrangements enabling the construction of a stadium for the Rugby World Cup. It investigates how costs and debt can be deliberately obscured, blurred and otherwise conflated within the disaggregated structures of contemporary local government. More particularly, we draw comparisons with the ‘shell game’ (a type of swindle involving three cups or shells and a pea). We trace the historical context in which governments have been encouraged to become entrepreneurial, resulting in the mixed ownership models of holding companies. We argue that this model of governance enabled the shifting of costs and debt such that the project could be made palatable to both councillors and citizens. However, the complexity of this design is such that it would be virtually impossible to analyse, interpret and debate.
Keywords:
Dunedin Stadium; Government; Costs; Debts; Events
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1781
Added
July 18, 2013