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Eurovision and the City : “United by Music” Meets “Malmö against Genocide”

Dagkouli‐kyriakoglou, Myrto ; de La Peña, Adriana ; Foroughanfar, Laleh LU ; Gustafsson, Jennie LU ; Melgaço, Lorena LU and Valli, Chiara (2025) In Urban Planning 10.
Abstract

“United by Music” was the slogan of the 2024 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held in Malmö. However, the festive spirit of the event oddly contrasted with what was described as “the largest police operation in Sweden’s history” (Ivarsson, 2024). This operation was mobilized in response to the expected civil protests regarding Eurovision’s decision to welcome Israel’s participation, despite its ongoing genocidal war on Gaza. We examine the temporary disruptions in Malmö’s urban space during Eurovision to understand the dissonance between a peaceful pro‐Palestine movement, a supposedly festive event, and the heightened securitization of the city with its alarmist tones. We aim to understand these contrasts within a broader... (More)

“United by Music” was the slogan of the 2024 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held in Malmö. However, the festive spirit of the event oddly contrasted with what was described as “the largest police operation in Sweden’s history” (Ivarsson, 2024). This operation was mobilized in response to the expected civil protests regarding Eurovision’s decision to welcome Israel’s participation, despite its ongoing genocidal war on Gaza. We examine the temporary disruptions in Malmö’s urban space during Eurovision to understand the dissonance between a peaceful pro‐Palestine movement, a supposedly festive event, and the heightened securitization of the city with its alarmist tones. We aim to understand these contrasts within a broader temporal context and across different geographical scales. We argue that the distinct racialized characterizations of neoliberal authoritarian practices in Malmö during Eurovision are deeply enmeshed with the implications of the Western narratives about Israel and Palestine, the growing influence of the far‐right in Swedish politics, and, ultimately, the identity Malmö aspires to and is perceived to have. Rather than being a local manifestation of isolated authoritarian practices, Eurovision in Malmö opens a conceptual space to explore authoritarianism as a multiscalar discourse and practice. This perspective allows us to move beyond the dichotomy of the “democratic West” versus the “authoritarian others” by revealing the persistence of authoritarian practices in democracies.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
authoritarianism, Eurovision, mega event, neoliberal planning, pro‐Palestine, securitization, Sweden
in
Urban Planning
volume
10
article number
9701
publisher
Cogitatio
external identifiers
  • scopus:105009229653
ISSN
2183-7635
DOI
10.17645/up.9701
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2025, Cogitatio Press. All rights reserved.
id
b456ad62-6d8d-4830-988b-d7b814a7e2c2
date added to LUP
2025-07-05 15:35:51
date last changed
2025-07-07 08:46:02
@article{b456ad62-6d8d-4830-988b-d7b814a7e2c2,
  abstract     = {{<p>“United by Music” was the slogan of the 2024 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, held in Malmö. However, the festive spirit of the event oddly contrasted with what was described as “the largest police operation in Sweden’s history” (Ivarsson, 2024). This operation was mobilized in response to the expected civil protests regarding Eurovision’s decision to welcome Israel’s participation, despite its ongoing genocidal war on Gaza. We examine the temporary disruptions in Malmö’s urban space during Eurovision to understand the dissonance between a peaceful pro‐Palestine movement, a supposedly festive event, and the heightened securitization of the city with its alarmist tones. We aim to understand these contrasts within a broader temporal context and across different geographical scales. We argue that the distinct racialized characterizations of neoliberal authoritarian practices in Malmö during Eurovision are deeply enmeshed with the implications of the Western narratives about Israel and Palestine, the growing influence of the far‐right in Swedish politics, and, ultimately, the identity Malmö aspires to and is perceived to have. Rather than being a local manifestation of isolated authoritarian practices, Eurovision in Malmö opens a conceptual space to explore authoritarianism as a multiscalar discourse and practice. This perspective allows us to move beyond the dichotomy of the “democratic West” versus the “authoritarian others” by revealing the persistence of authoritarian practices in democracies.</p>}},
  author       = {{Dagkouli‐kyriakoglou, Myrto and de La Peña, Adriana and Foroughanfar, Laleh and Gustafsson, Jennie and Melgaço, Lorena and Valli, Chiara}},
  issn         = {{2183-7635}},
  keywords     = {{authoritarianism; Eurovision; mega event; neoliberal planning; pro‐Palestine; securitization; Sweden}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  publisher    = {{Cogitatio}},
  series       = {{Urban Planning}},
  title        = {{Eurovision and the City : “United by Music” Meets “Malmö against Genocide”}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/up.9701}},
  doi          = {{10.17645/up.9701}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}