Lun
15
Giu
Seminari e Convegni
From Climate-Positive Hype to Engagement Theatre: Brisbane 2032, Olympic Governance, and the Politics of Urban Spectacle
Professor Marcus Foth, School of Design, Queensland University of Technology (Brisbane, Australia), will deliver the seminar From Climate-Positive Hype to Engagement Theatre: Brisbane 2032, Olympic Governance, and the Politics of Urban Spectacle on 15 June 2026 at 9:00 a.m.
Programme
Welcome address: M. Santangelo
From climate-positive hype to engagement theatre: M. Foth
Discussion: M. Bottero, C. Caprioli
Abstract
Brisbane’s successful bid for the 2032 Olympic Games was globally promoted as the world’s first “climate-positive” Olympics. Yet this contractual commitment was later quietly removed from the Olympic Host Contract, replaced by weaker aspirational language with no enforcement mechanisms. Drawing on comparative research with colleagues at Politecnico di Torino and recent developments in Brisbane, this talk examines how sustainability rhetoric, visual spectacle, and governance practices intersect in contemporary Olympic planning.
The presentation introduces the concepts of “engagement theatre” and “bedazzlement” to analyse how political legitimacy is manufactured through imagery and promise-making rather than participatory decision-making. By situating Brisbane 2032 within a longer lineage of Olympic governance failures and sustainability backtracking, the presentation reflects on what these dynamics reveal about the limits of mega-event-led urban transformation and the urgent need for more accountable, transparent, and genuinely regenerative planning models.
Biography
Marcus Foth is a Professor in Strategic Design in the School of Design and a Chief Investigator in the QUT Digital Media Research Centre (DMRC), Faculty of Creative Industries, Education, and Social Justice, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
The event will be held in person and online. Online participation is available at the following link.
Programme
Welcome address: M. Santangelo
From climate-positive hype to engagement theatre: M. Foth
Discussion: M. Bottero, C. Caprioli
Abstract
Brisbane’s successful bid for the 2032 Olympic Games was globally promoted as the world’s first “climate-positive” Olympics. Yet this contractual commitment was later quietly removed from the Olympic Host Contract, replaced by weaker aspirational language with no enforcement mechanisms. Drawing on comparative research with colleagues at Politecnico di Torino and recent developments in Brisbane, this talk examines how sustainability rhetoric, visual spectacle, and governance practices intersect in contemporary Olympic planning.
The presentation introduces the concepts of “engagement theatre” and “bedazzlement” to analyse how political legitimacy is manufactured through imagery and promise-making rather than participatory decision-making. By situating Brisbane 2032 within a longer lineage of Olympic governance failures and sustainability backtracking, the presentation reflects on what these dynamics reveal about the limits of mega-event-led urban transformation and the urgent need for more accountable, transparent, and genuinely regenerative planning models.
Biography
Marcus Foth is a Professor in Strategic Design in the School of Design and a Chief Investigator in the QUT Digital Media Research Centre (DMRC), Faculty of Creative Industries, Education, and Social Justice, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
The event will be held in person and online. Online participation is available at the following link.