Abstract

Policy makers often legitimize bids for major sport events and public funding of elite sports by trickle-down effects, suggesting that hosting events, sporting success, and athlete role models inspire the population to participate themselves in sport and physical activity. According to previous review articles, empirical evidence of trickle-down effects are mixed, with several studies citing marginal or no effect. The purpose of this study is to apply a realist synthesis approach to evaluate under which conditions trickle-down effects occur (i.e., what works for whom under which circumstances?). Using rapid evidence assessment methodology, 58 empirical articles were identified in the search process and critically analyzed through the lens of realist synthesis evaluation. The analysis identified six conditions under which trickle-down effects have occurred: Event leveraging initiatives, capacity of community sport to cater for new participants, live spectating experiences, consumption possibilities on television or other media, and communities housing event venues. The findings have implications for the sustainability of sport policy decisions and public finance, as the likelihood of trickle-down effects increases with integrated planning and sustainable spending related to the above six conditions.

Highlights

  • Bids to host elite international sport events often point to trickle-down effects (TDE) as one of the benefits associated with staging the event [1]

  • We argue that it is time for researchers to temper the debate about the “existence” of TDE, and instead focus their efforts on investigating the mechanisms and conditions by which elite sports in general, and sport events, are most likely to bring about the desired participation impacts [5]

  • It summarizes the years of publication of TDE studies cific event or elite sport context of those

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Summary

Introduction

Bids to host elite international sport events often point to trickle-down effects (TDE) as one of the benefits associated with staging the event [1]. These effects refer to the inspiring role of elite sport including an event’s capacity to increase sport and/or physical activity (PA) levels within host populations [2]. TDE are often employed as one argument to legitimize the spending of public money to support these events ex ante or to finance elite sport programs. Outcomes of TDE can be measured in terms of new participants in a sport or PA, an increase in participation frequency, participants returning to a sport after a long hiatus, or participants switching from one sport/activity to another [2]

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