Building the ‘Competitive City’: Labour and Toronto’s Bid to Host the Olympic Games

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Building the ‘Competitive City’: Labour and Toronto’s Bid to Host the Olympic Games
Abstract
Toronto’s quest to host the Summer Olympic Games has dominated both contemporary planning discourse and practice. For some, the pursuit of the games embodies Toronto’s transformation into a ‘competitive’ global city. Relatively unexplored in this discourse are the contradictory roles that labour plays in contemporary urban development. I argue that the new labour geography can provide some interesting insights into such processes. Specifically, labour geographers have given workers with divergent interests greater agency in shaping economic landscapes and have noted the multi-scalar organisation of labour. The paper looks at the contradictory and conflicting positions held by different labour unions in Toronto toward the city’s bid to host the 2008 Olympics. The case study suggests that labour is an active agent in processes shaping contemporary Toronto and support the bid for complex reasons ranging from the promise of jobs to potential future organising opportunities.
Publication
Geoforum
Volume
35
Issue
1
Pages
47–58
Date
2004
Language
English
Short Title
Building the ‘Competitive City’
Accessed
6/3/15, 3:51 AM
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Citation
Tufts, S. (2004). Building the ‘Competitive City’: Labour and Toronto’s Bid to Host the Olympic Games. Geoforum, 35(1), 47–58. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/223044415_Building_the_’competitive_city’_Labour_and_Toronto’s_bid_to_host_the_Olympic_games