"This book explores the intersections of event studies, geography and marketing. It contributes new insight on event studies and adds critical insight on place, contributing to ongoing challenges of promoting places during a time when the competition to attract visitors will make or break a destination. The book offers a truly international perspective into the complexity of these debates, and the wide array of perspectives and approaches in very different geographical locales. Destinations are continually seeking ways to be creating, and leveraging what is unique about a place is a way to brand, promote and work towards defining and even redefining place identities. This book will challenge students and academic researchers to explore interdisciplinary conceptual understandings and issues aligned with place branding and place promotion, and practitioners will benefit from the cases presented in this book because it will challenge them to think about the places and events they promote in a different way." Nicholas Wise, Reader in International Urban Change in the Faculty of Business and Law at Liverpool John Moores University, UK