Tough calls to make: Contingency theory and the Centennial Olympic Games
Abstract
This paper offers a quick overview of Cameron's contingency theory of conflict management in public relations. It then applies the theory to three cases that occurred during the 1996 Summer Olympic Games that were taken from the policy position papers, notes, diaries and tape recordings of C. Richard Yarbrough, Managing Director‐Communications of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games (ACOG). The areas analysed include: the moving of preliminary volleyball matches from one venue to another which was forced by conflict between gay activists and local politicians who passed an anti‐gay resolution — a sustained effort at accommodation that shifted to advocacy; conflict between the ACOG board of directors and the media resulting from the disclosure of ACOG executive salaries — a strong advocacy stance that led to compromise; and conflict threatened between ACOG and a minority minister who was disgruntled about an Olympic sponsor — a case of marginality too insignificant to bother with. The cases not only illustrate and support factors in the contingency theory, but highlight the impracticality and inflexibility of two‐way symmetrical or mixed‐motive public relations as models of choice.
Keywords
Citation
Yarbrough, C.R., Cameron, G.T., Sallot, L.M. and McWilliams, A. (1998), "Tough calls to make: Contingency theory and the Centennial Olympic Games", Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 39-56. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb023483
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1998, MCB UP Limited