标签:
杂谈 |
Lessons From Beijing
from IOC website
As a key part of the
IOC’s transfer of knowledge programme, the IOC
Official Debrief of the Beijing 2008 Games will take place from 24
to 27 November 2008 in London. This event, which will be attended
by members of the Beijing 2008, Vancouver
2010,
London 2012 and Sochi 2014 Organising Committees (OCOGs), as well
as representatives of the 2016 Candidate Cities and other Games
stakeholders, will give these future Games organisers the chance to
learn from the experience and knowledge gained by their Beijing
counterparts during their seven years of preparation.

Experience
The event will consist
of a combination of plenary discussions and side meetings, which
will look at the planning, operational and technical elements of
organising an Olympic Games, such as sport, accommodation,
transport, culture, education and logistics. There will also be
elements of the debrief addressing the various
stakeholders’ experience, for participants at the
Games such as athletes, spectators, workforce and the media. A full
technology debrief will also be held in London the week before. A
highlight of the week will be
IOC President Jacques
Rogge giving the
2008 Pierre de Coubertin Lecture on 24 November. Presented by
London 2012 in conjunction with the Royal Society of Arts and the
British Olympic Foundation, the President will deliver a speech
entitled “Advancing the Games: the IOC, London
2012 and the future of de Coubertin’s Olympic
Movement”.

The OGKM
Programme
The Beijing Debrief is a
key component of the IOC’s Olympic Games
Knowledge Management (OGKM) programme, which consists of three main
elements: services, personal experience and information. The
services include workshops, seminars and a network of experts with
Games experience on a range of Olympic topics that the OCOGs are
able to call upon throughout their lifecycle. The OCOGs are also
able to gain personal experience on Games preparations and
operations through the Games-time observers’
programme, the official Games Debriefing and a secondment
programme, which allows staff members from future OCOGs to work on
the current edition of the Olympic Games. The final element of OGKM
is information, which includes the Official Games Report, technical
manuals, knowledge reports, a range of useful documents and
publications and the IOC’s visual transfer of
knowledge of photos and films. All this information is available to
the OCOGs through an extranet that is managed by the
IOC.

The History of
OGKM
IOC President Jacques
Rogge initiated the Olympic Games transfer of knowledge process in
1998 with the assistance of the IOC administration. This project
was to become part of a vision that the President would drive
forward following his election in 2001 to streamline the Olympic
Games and to ensure that future Games organisers can apply
successful practices to their own projects. The initial project led
to the creation of a company called Olympic Games Knowledge
Services (OGKS), whose services were subsequently regrouped under
the responsibility of the IOC’s Olympic Games
Department in mid-2005 under the name of OGKM.

前一篇:参加全国骨科学术大会
后一篇:为什么“硬骨头”咳嗽一声就断了