2024-03-28T08:53:24Zhttp://uobrep.openrepository.com/oai/requestoai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2237832016-06-09T09:57:41Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The value of tourism degrees: a Luton-based case study
Petrova, Petia
Mason, Peter
higher education
value
employability
tourism education
2012-05-15T11:24:56Z
2012-05-15T11:24:56Z
2004
Article
Petrova, P., Mason, P. (2004) 'The value of tourism degrees: a Luton-based case study' Education + Training 46 (3):153
0040-0912
10.1108/00400910410531804
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/223783
Education + Training
en
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/00400910410531804
Emerald
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2254942013-06-24T11:23:43Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Worldmaking agency – worldmaking authority: the sovereign constitutive role of tourism
Hollinshead, Keith
Ateljevic, Irena
Ali, Nazia
2012-05-23T08:45:27Z
2012-05-23T08:45:27Z
2012-05-23
Article
Hollinshead, K., Ateljevic, I. & Ali, N. (2009) 'Worldmaking Agency – Worldmaking Authority: The Sovereign Constitutive Role of Tourism' Tourism Geographies 11 (4):427 pp.427-443
1461-6688
1470-1340
10.1080/14616680903262562
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225494
Tourism Geographies
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14616680903262562
Archived with thanks to Tourism Geographies
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2254992012-11-13T09:29:29Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Mountain based adventure tourism: lifestyle choice and identify formation
Beedie, Paul
2012-05-23T09:23:38Z
2012-05-23T09:23:38Z
2010
Book
Beedie, P. (2010) Mountain based adventure tourism: lifestyle choice and identity formation. London: Lambert Academic Publishing
9783838350431
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225499
en
Lambert Academic Publishing
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255032012-05-23T10:35:06Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Lessons from the field: Reflecting on a tourism research journey around the 'Celtic periphery'
Everett, Sally
2012-05-23T09:35:06Z
2012-05-23T09:35:06Z
2010
Article
Everett, Sally. 'Lessons from the field: Reflecting on a tourism research journey around the 'Celtic periphery''. Current Issues in Tourism 13(2) pp.161-175
1368-3500
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225503
Current Issues in Tourism
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13683500902853502
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255202012-09-12T10:40:02Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Adventure tourism as a ‘new frontier’ in leisure
Beedie, Paul
adventure tourism
tourism
leisure
2012-05-23T08:59:31Z
2012-05-23T08:59:31Z
2012-05-23
Beedie, P. (2008) 'Adventure Tourism as a ‘New Frontier’ in Leisure', World Leisure Journal 50(3) pp.173-183
0441-9057
1607-8055
10.1080/04419057.2008.9674551
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225520
World Leisure Journal
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/04419057.2008.9674551
Archived with thanks to World Leisure Journal
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255082012-05-23T10:41:53Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Beyond the visual gaze? The pursuit of an embodied experience through food tourism
Everett, Sally
2012-05-23T09:41:52Z
2012-05-23T09:41:52Z
2008
Article
Everett, S. (2008) 'Beyond the visual gaze? The pursuit of an embodied experience through food tourism' Tourism Studies 8(3) pp.337-358
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225508
Tourism Studies
en
http://tou.sagepub.com/content/8/3/337.short
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255712012-07-16T10:06:10Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Production places or consumption spaces? The place-making agency of food tourism in Ireland and Scotland
Everett, Sally
2012-05-23T10:03:23Z
2012-05-23T10:03:23Z
2012
Article
Everett, S. (2012) 'Production places or consumption spaces? The place-making agency of food tourism in Ireland and Scotland', Tourism Geographies, 2012, pp.1-20
1461-6688
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225571
Tourism Geographies
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14616688.2012.647321
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255262017-10-16T11:31:08Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Diasporic identity, heritage and "homecoming": how Sarawakian-Chinese tourists feel on tour in Beijing
Tie, Caroline
Seaton, Tony
University of Bedfordshire
University of Limerick
China
Sarawakian-Chinese
identity
2012-05-23T09:29:53Z
2012-05-23T09:29:53Z
2012
Article
Tie, C. and Seaton, T. (2013) 'Diasporic Identity, Heritage, and "Homecoming": How Sarawakian-Chinese Tourists Feel on Tour in Beijing' Tourism Analysis, 18 (3), pp.227-243.
1083-5423
http://dx.doi.org/10.3727/108354213X13673398610538
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225526
Tourism Analysis
en
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ta/2013/00000018/00000003/art00002
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255102014-03-31T12:28:15Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The role of food tourism in sustaining regional identity: a case study of Cornwall, South West England
Everett, Sally
2012-05-23T10:00:01Z
2012-05-23T10:00:01Z
2008
Article
Everett, S. (2008) 'The role of food tourism in sustaining regional identity: a case study of Cornwall, South West England' Journal of Sustainable Tourism 16(2) pp.150-167
0966-9582
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225510
Journal of Sustainable Tourism
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2167/jost696.0
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255002012-07-17T11:27:14Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Researcher reflexivity in tourism studies research: Dynamical dances with emotions
Ali, Nazia
2012-05-23T09:24:16Z
2012-05-23T09:24:16Z
2011
Book chapter
Ali, N. (2011) 'Researcher reflexivity in tourism studies research: Dynamical dances with emotions', in Ateljevic, A., Pritchard, A. and Morgan, N. (eds.) The critical turn in tourism studies: Creating an academy of hope. 2nd edn. Oxon: Routledge. pp.13-26
041558552X
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225500
en
Routledge
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255522012-11-29T14:03:39Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism travel and Islamaphobia
Ali, Nazia
Stephenson, M.
Islam
Islamaphobia
2012-05-23T10:05:58Z
2012-05-23T10:05:58Z
2010
Book chapter
Ali, N. and Stephenson, M. (2010) 'Tourism travel and Islamaphobia in: Jafari, J. and Scott, J. (eds.)Tourism and the Muslim world. Bingley: Emerald. pp.235-251.
9781849509206
10.1108/S2042-1443(2010)0000002018
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225552
en
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/books.htm?issn=2042-1443&volume=2&chapterid=1896326&show=abstract&PHPSESSID=m6j52t57nq009coojhpfljfbo6
Bingley
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2256002012-11-13T10:08:31Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism's role in national identity formulation for the United Kingdom's Pakistani diaspora
Ali, Nazia
Holden, Andrew
2012-05-23T14:22:04Z
2012-05-23T14:22:04Z
2011
Book chapter
Ali, N. (2011) 'Tourism's role in national identity formulation for the United Kingdom's Pakistani diaspora', in Frew, E. and White, L. (eds.) Tourism and national identity: An international perspective. London: Routledge. pp.70-92
0415572770
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225600
en
Taylor and Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2256132020-04-23T07:28:39Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism studies and confined understanding: the call for a 'new sense' postdisciplinary
Hollinshead, Keith
Seaton, V.
tourism studies
Recently, in Current Issues in Tourism, Coles, Hall, and Duval produced a very well-received inspection of the state of Tourism Studies/Tourism Management and acutely stated the case for the much more frequent and rigorous use of postdisciplinary forms of research in the (above) twin fields. This succeeding review article in Tourism Analysis is an update of a like “call-to-postdisciplinarity,” which has been in steady gestation over the last decade, and it is now published here as one that seeks to augment the well-reasoned, panoramic thinking of Coles, Hall, and Duval by clarifying the kinds of “new sense” and “open to the future” dialogic understandings that such a turn towards or engagement with postdisciplinary insight would conceivably entail. While Coles, Hall, and Duval have so capably surveyed the distinctions between (mainly) postdisciplinary styles of inquiry and interdisciplinary ones, this review article now seeks to provide an introductory critique of the kinds of postdisciplinary awarenesses that Tourism Studies/Tourism Management now ubiquitously need. In this examination of the demand for flexible forms of understanding that can more readily interpolate the often difficult-to-distill identifications and the new-register aspirations of populations today—notably those in ambiguous/hybrid postcolonal settings—this critique draws on Gilroy and Bhabha to help map the ambivalent terrain of the world's many new enunciations (i. e., the freshly vivified/revivified projections of culturehood). Thereafter, it beckons the bricoleurship approaches (i. e., the slow/tall-in-reflexivity/high-in-demonstrability interpretative 'soft science' approaches) of Kincheloe to help researchers achieve those sought forms of postdisciplinary criticality. Hopefully, there are nowadays not just a few universities and colleges preparing researchers and practitioners for service in Tourism Studies/Tourism Management (on each continent) who can recognize the need to more than occasionally escape the confines of restrictive/ overinstitutionalized “old sense” interpretations of the world, and support or replace them with other and fresher sorts of postdisciplinary (or extradisciplinary?/adisciplinary?) understandings that are not so restrictively ruled and regulated by the often-acute disciplinary normalizations of yesteryear.
2012-05-23T14:21:42Z
2012-05-23T14:21:42Z
2010
Article
Hollinshead, K. and Seaton, V. (2010) 'Tourism studies and confined understanding: The call for a 'new sense' postdisciplinary' Tourism Analysis 15(4) pp.499-512
1083-5423
10.3727/108354210X12864727693669
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225613
Tourism Analysis
en
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ta/2010/00000015/00000004/art00010
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2256012020-04-23T07:28:39Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The 'worldmaking' prodigy of tourism: the reach of power of tourism in the dynamics of change and transformation
Hollinshead, Keith
tourism
change
transformation
worldmaking
This review article is the second of a pair of articles that introduce the field of Tourism Studies/Tourism Management (hereafter Tourism Studies) to the concept of worldmaking as an operational construct to help critically describe the creative/inventive role and function of tourism in the making of culture and place. In the first article—the companion manuscript, which appeared in the preceding issue of Tourism Analysis—the recent work of Meethan in Tourism in Global Society: Place, Culture, and Consumption (hereafter “Tourism as Global Society”) was used as a conceptual catalyst to help make the case for deeper and more frequent critical and interpretive inspections of the power and reach of tourism in significantly and variously contributing to the making/demaking/remaking of peoples, places, and pasts, rather than just serving as a reproducing authority cum agency, which just mirrors what is already there in each location. While Tourism Studies was found (by Meethan) to be an as yet rather contained theoretical field, the concept of worldmaking was put forward in the first article as a thinking tool to assist critical understanding of the everyday articulation and the everyplace effectivity of tourism as a particular strong and pervasive producer of political meanings (or contested versions) of locality. In this follow-up article, an attempt is made to encourage more commonplace reflective and reflexive examinations of the creative and inventive manufacture capacity of tourism—as it works, or is worked upon, in collaboration with other formative and educative vehicles in society—to produce particular vistas of place and space, or to otherwise reconfigure the held visions of meaning and of becoming by populations. Such is the very prodigy of tourism (such are the potential prodigies of tourism!!), with all the immense myriad cultural, social, psychic, and political—as well as economic and environmental—ramifications that are entailed by that sort of sometimes-grand-and-magnificent/sometimes-petty-and-quotidian mediation of locality and heritage. While the article concludes by codifying (and damning!) a number of clichés that litter much hastily-derived contemporary commentary on and about tourism—as drawn from the insight-loaded sociological work of Meethan—this second article is composed under the judgment that too many commentators in Tourism Studies (itself) are prone to reifying tourism as an almost undifferentiated industrial force of globalization. Such a judgment suggests that too many who work within Tourism Studies uncritically depict tourism as an almost-inevitable set of almost-neat impacts or almost-neat processes that affect places in almost-unstoppable and repeatable fashions across the globe. Such recurring (if generally implied rather than exhaustively shown) commentaries in the field of Tourism Studies are inclined to far too frequently envision local or involved populations merely as being nothing more than passive agents of “tourism”—that is, as a sort of fodder for the unrelenting growth of the expansionist and almost-predictable industry. Running through both of these companion articles on the worldmaking role and function of tourism, therefore, is the view that the creative authority and inventive agency of tourism is something that can be (or is being) used positively by groups and communities—in accordance with their own perspective, of course—at all levels of society to express new/corrective/fresh enunciative visions for local places. It can also be (and is being) used negatively—again, in perspectival regard—to silence, suppress, or subjugate other unwanted interpretations of place, space, or local inheritance. Such is the declarative and clearly pungently political force of tourism as it is deployed in worldmaking fashion in concert with (or at times, wholly against) other coproductive and co-generative narrative-issuing mediating forces in and across society. The two companion articles were first presented as one overall keynote delivery at the second Critical Tourism Studies Conference in Split, Croatia, in 2007. An earlier version of the combined/aggregate presentation may be found in a 400-page work by Ateljevic, Pritchard, and Morgan within the Elsevier Advances in Tourism Research series: The Critical Turn in Tourism Studies: Innovative Research Methods.
2012-05-23T14:22:31Z
2012-05-23T14:22:31Z
2009
Article
Hollinshead, K. (2009) 'The 'worldmaking' prodigy of tourism: The reach of power of tourism in the dynamics of change and transformation' Tourism Analysis 14(1) pp.139-152
1083-5423
http://dx.doi.org/10.3727/108354209788970162
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225601
Tourism Analysis
en
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ta/2009/00000014/00000001/art00012
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255272012-11-26T12:45:00Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Theme parks and the representation of culture and nature: the consumer aesthetics of presentation and performance
Hollinshead, Keith
theme parks
2012-05-23T09:30:34Z
2012-05-23T09:30:34Z
2009
Book chapter
Hollinshead, K. (2009) 'Theme parks and the representation of culture and nature: The consumer aesthetics of presentation and performance', in Jamal, T. and Robinson, M. (eds.) The SAGE handbook of tourism studies. Los Angeles: Sage. pp.269-289.
9781412923972
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225527
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book229423#tabview=toc
Sage
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255242020-04-23T08:42:54Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The environment-tourism nexus: the influence of market ethics
Holden, Andrew
University of Bedfordshire
environment tourism
environmental ethics
environmental economics
sustainable tourism
Society is at a critical juncture in its relationship with the natural environment, a relationship in which tourism has growing significance. Yet, twenty years after the Brundtland Report, environmental policy has to date had little influence upon the workings of the tourism market, the supply and demand elements of which determine the ‘use’ or ‘non-use’ of nature. Inherent to the market is its environmental ethic, that is, the extent of our recognition of nature’s rights to existence. The thesis of this article is that whilst environmental policy may possibly have a greater influence in the future, it is the environmental ethics of the market that will be deterministic to the balance of the tourism-environment relationship.
2012-05-23T09:23:06Z
2012-05-23T09:23:06Z
2009-06-25
Holden, A. (2008), 'The environment-tourism nexus: Influence of market ethics', Annals of Tourism Research, 36(3), pp. 373–389
0160-7383
10.1016/j.annals.2008.10.009
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225524
Annals of Tourism Research
en
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160738309000279
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255062016-01-22T13:59:17Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Exploring stakeholders' perceptions of sustainable tourism development in the Annapurna Conservation Area: Issues and challenge
Holden, Andrew
2012-05-23T09:37:19Z
2012-05-23T09:37:19Z
2010
Article
Holden, A. (2010) 'Exploring stakeholders' perceptions of sustainable tourism development in the Annapurna Conservation Area: Issues and challenge', Tourism & Hospitality: Planning & Development, 7(4) pp.337-351
1479-053X
10.1080/1479053X.2010.523177
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225506
Tourism, Planning & Development
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1479053X.2010.523177
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255072020-04-23T07:28:39Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism and poverty reduction: an interpretation by the poor of Elmina, Ghana
Holden, Andrew
Sonne, Joel
Novelli, Marina
Over the past decade, academic research into the use of tourism as a contributor to poverty reduction has grown considerably; however, there are few insights on how the poor perceive the connections between poverty and tourism. Based upon interpretive and participatory fieldwork with the poor of Elmina in Ghana, this paper explores their understanding and constructions of poverty and how they comprehend tourism as a provider of alternative livelihood opportunities. It emerged that poverty is understood as a multi-dimensional construct, including low and irregular incomes, depletion of natural resources, a lack of access to social assets and educational opportunities, and denial of meaningful participation in society. At a time of structural readjustment in Elmina's economy, the potential of tourism to enhance livelihoods and reduce poverty is high, but remains hindered by major barriers to entrepreneurship development and employment within the sector, which is worsened by the lack of access to credit, exclusion from decision-making, poor skills and excessive bureaucracy. It became evident that a focus on the use of tourism for macroeconomic gains will not necessarily benefit the poor. They need to be included in tourism policy and practice, not only as a target group, but also in participatory mechanisms to ensure the appropriate use of tourism for poverty reduction. It is argued that it is only through a better understanding of poor people's experiences of poverty, that tourism can be used more meaningfully as a strategy for its alleviation.
2012-05-23T09:39:28Z
2012-05-23T09:39:28Z
2011
Article
Holden, A., Sonne, J. and Novelli, M. (2011) 'Tourism and poverty reduction: An interpretation by the poor of Elmina, Ghana' Tourism', Planning & Development, 8(3) pp.281-296
1479053X
10.1080/21568316.2011.591160
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225507
Tourism, Planning & Development
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/21568316.2011.591160
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255512012-11-26T12:27:47Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism and natural resources
Holden, Andrew
2012-05-23T10:00:34Z
2012-05-23T10:00:34Z
2009
Book chapter
Holden, A. (2009) 'Tourism and natural resources', in Jamal, T. and Robinson, M. (eds.) Handbook of tourism studies. London: Pearson. pp.203-214
1412923972
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225551
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book229423#tabview=toc
Pearson
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255952020-04-23T07:28:41Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Ways of seeing degrees of leisure: from practice to pedagogy
Elkington, Samuel D.
In the context of higher education (HE), Leisure Studies has become an increasingly diverse, segmented and disjointed collection of curricula, driven by a fast-changing politico-economic landscape and the growing market potential of emergent sub-specialisms such as sport, tourism and event management. A decline in interest in, and perceived relevance of, the idea of leisure has seen Leisure Studies as a field fade from curricula at many universities. With issues of disconnect between leisure research and leisure practice cited as a major reason for the downturn in leisure-focused degree programmes, the challenges facing leisure scholars are inherently pedagogic: linking the fields of theory and practice in meaningful ways. Drawing upon evidence-based practice, this paper examines the philosophical and practical utility of leisure not just as a teaching object but as a pedagogic orientation; a profound way of seeing that ushers in a critical appreciation and understanding of the nature and significance of leisure in the lifeworld experiences of students. The ‘leisured' pedagogic orientation outlined represents one way experiential knowledge can be recognised and embedded in HE curricula, providing insight into the kinds of learning that might be effective in terms of enhancement of students' awareness of leisure and their development of leisure knowledge, skills, attitudes and values. This calls for the suspension of the traditional paradigms of thought relating to learning for leisure, in favour of a leisure pedagogy that is truly situated in the context of modern leisure in all its subtle complexity.
2012-05-23T13:48:50Z
2012-05-23T13:48:50Z
2012-05-23
Elkington, S.,(2012) Ways of seeing degrees of leisure: from practice to pedagogy, Leisure Studies 32 (4) 447-461
0261-4367
1466-4496
10.1080/02614367.2012.684151
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225595
Leisure Studies
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02614367.2012.684151
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2255892018-06-25T12:21:23Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Articulating a systematic phenomenology of flow: an experience-process perspective
Elkington, Samuel D.
2012-05-23T13:54:51Z
2012-05-23T13:54:51Z
2012-05-23
Article
Elkington, S., (2012) Articulating a systematic phenomenology of flow: an experience-process perspective, Leisure/Loisir 34(3) 327-360
1492-7713
2151-2221
10.1080/14927713.2010.524364
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/225589
Leisure/Loisir
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14927713.2010.524364
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2518152012-11-13T09:29:04Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Children, sport and active play: a comparison of rural and urban places
Beedie, Paul
2012-11-12T13:34:19Z
2012-11-12T13:34:19Z
2012-10-01
Book chapter
Beedie, P. Children, Sport and Active Play: A Comparison of Rural and Urban Places in A. Andrew and K. Spracklen (ed.) Sport & Leisure Ethics, Rights and Social Relationships LSA Publication 120, 139-160
9781905369317
190536931X
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/251815
en
http://www.leisure-studies-association.info/LSAWEB/Index.html
Leisure Studies Association
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2511952020-04-23T07:29:08Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
‘Tourism state’ cultural production: the re-making of Nova Scotia
Hollinshead, Keith
Ateljevic, Irena
Ali, Nazia
governance through tourism
provincial identity
antimodernity
symbolic control
symbolic authority
traditional folk values
naturalization
normalization
Nova Scotia
tourism
Mathews and Richter - amongst many - have condemned the paucity of political analyses in Tourism Studies, while Hall and Meethan have likewise bemoaned the field's related privileging of prescriptivist studies of policy making at the expense of longitudinal, descriptivist interpretations. Responding to such calls, this paper (on the under-suspected ideological power and authority of tourism) critiques the contribution to the understanding of real-world governmental action of the historian McKay as generated in his investigation of matters of cultural representation and cultural formation in Canada.
2012-11-06T14:39:06Z
2012-11-06T14:39:06Z
2009-11
Article
Hollinshead, K., Ateljevic, I., Ali, N. (2009) '‘Tourism State’ Cultural Production: The Re-making of Nova Scotia' Tourism Geographies 11 (4):526-545
1461-6688
1470-1340
10.1080/14616680903262737
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/251195
Tourism Geographies
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14616680903262737
Archived with thanks to Tourism Geographies
Taylor and Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2796552013-04-11T10:10:26Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Special issue endnote: tourism and worldmaking – where do we go from here?
Ateljevic, Irena
Hollinshead, Keith
Ali, Nazia
2013-04-10T15:08:02Z
2013-04-10T15:08:02Z
2009
Article
Ateljevica, I., Hollinshead, K. and Ali, N. (2009)'Special Issue Endnote: Tourism and Worldmaking – Where Do We Go From Here?', Tourism Geographies, 11 (4), pp.546-552.
1461-6688
1470-1340
10.1080/14616680903262794
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/279655
Tourism Geographies
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14616680903262794
Archived with thanks to Tourism Geographies
Taylor and Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2796562013-04-10T16:09:41Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Event design
Ali, Nazia
2013-04-10T15:09:41Z
2013-04-10T15:09:41Z
2012
Book chapter
Ali, N. (2012) 'Events Design', in N. Ferdinand and P. Kitchin (eds.) Events Management: An International Approach, pp.51-69, London: Sage.
9780857022417
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/279656
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book235284#tabview=toc
Sage Publications
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2796592013-04-11T10:09:21Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Researcher reflexivity: a stranger amongst my 'own'?
Ali, Nazia
2013-04-10T15:27:04Z
2013-04-10T15:27:04Z
2007
Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
Ali, N. (2007) ‘Researcher Reflexivity: a stranger amongst my ‘own’?’ in In: Harris, Candice/van Hal, Marlies (Eds.) Book of Papers: The Critical Turn in Tourism Studies: Promoting an Academy of Hope? Proceedings of the Second International Critical Tourism Studies (CTS) Conference. Split. pp.5-16
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/279659
en
Elsevier
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2796602013-04-11T10:08:13Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Post‐colonial Pakistani mobilities: the embodiment of the 'myth of return' in tourism
Ali, Nazia
Holden, Andrew
2013-04-10T15:28:34Z
2013-04-10T15:28:34Z
2006
Article
Ali, N. and Holden, A. (2006) 'Post‐colonial Pakistani Mobilities: the Embodiment of the ‘Myth of Return’, Mobilities, 1 (2), pp.217-242.
1745-0101
1745-011X
10.1080/17450100600726605
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/279660
Mobilities
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17450100600726605
Archived with thanks to Mobilities
Taylor and Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2808052013-04-11T14:03:50Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Methods mutiny in tourism studies research: when the informant takes over!
Ali, Nazia
2013-04-11T11:42:02Z
2013-04-11T11:42:02Z
2009
Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
Ali, N. (2009) ‘Methods Mutiny in Tourism Studies Research: when the informant takes over!’, 3rd International Critical Tourism Studies Conference: Connecting Academies of Hope: Creative Vistas and Critical Visions, Zadar, Croatia, 21-24 June. Zarar: Tourist Board of Zardar.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280805
en
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/products/journals/news_story.htm?id=1525
Tourist Board of Zadar
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2808012018-11-09T11:22:13Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Sport sociology (Active learning in sport series)
Beedie, Paul
Craig, Peter
2013-04-11T10:08:02Z
2013-04-11T10:08:02Z
2010
Book
Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) (2010) Sport sociology. 2nd edn. Exeter: Learning Matters.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280801
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813952013-04-16T10:55:53Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Introduction to sociological theories of sport in modern society
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-16T09:13:33Z
2013-04-16T09:13:33Z
2010
Book chapter
Beedie, P. (2010) 'Introduction to sociological theories of sport in modern society', in Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) Sport sociology. Exeter: Learning Matters, pp.3-10.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281395
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1#tabview=toc
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2800612013-04-30T20:38:52Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The significance of ethnic identities upon tourism participation within the Pakistani community
Ali, Nazia
2013-04-11T10:03:32Z
2013-04-11T10:03:32Z
2006
Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
Ali, N. (2006) ‘The significance of ethnic identities upon tourism participation within the Pakistani community’, 3rd Graduate Research in Tourism Conference, Canakkale, Turkey, 25-28 May.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280061
en
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2808002013-04-11T11:47:22Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Playing in the Great Outdoors: risk and adventure activities in the twenty-first century
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-11T10:06:15Z
2013-04-11T10:06:15Z
2013
Book chapter
Beedie, P. (2013) 'Playing in the great outdoors: Risk and adventure activities in the twenty-first century', in Gammon, S. and Elkington, S. (eds.) Contemporary perspectives in leisure:
Meanings, motives and lifelong Learning. London: Routledge, Chapter 10.
9780415829892
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280800
en
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415829892/
Routledge
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2807992013-04-11T11:50:46Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The adventure enigma: an analysis of mountain based adventure tourism in Britain
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-11T09:59:54Z
2013-04-11T09:59:54Z
2013
Book chapter
Beedie, P. (2013) 'The Adventure Enigma: An Analysis of Mountain Based Adventure Tourism in Britain', In Taylor, S., Varley, P. and Johnston, T. (eds.) Adventure Tourism: Meanings, Experience & Learning. London: Routledge, pp.22-23.
978-0-415-52483-4
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280799
en
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415524834/
Routledge
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2800602013-04-11T11:49:53Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Anthony Giddens: structuration theory and mountaineering
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-11T10:02:14Z
2013-04-11T10:02:14Z
2013
Book chapter
Beedie, P. (2013) 'Anthony Giddens: Structuration theory and mountaineering', in Pike, E. and Beames, S. (eds.) Outdoor adventure and social theory. London: Routledge, pp.88-99.
9780415532679
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/280060
en
http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415532679/
Routledge
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813782013-04-16T10:57:28Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Sport and adventure
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-16T09:10:43Z
2013-04-16T09:10:43Z
2010
Book chapter
Beedie, P. (2010) 'Sport and adventure', in Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) Sport sociology. Exeter: Learning Matters, pp.241-260.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281378
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1#tabview=toc
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813762013-04-16T10:58:29Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Sport and community
Craig, Peter
Beedie, Paul
Mellor, G.
2013-04-16T09:07:19Z
2013-04-16T09:07:19Z
2010
Book chapter
Craig, P., Beedie, P. and Mellor, G. (2010) 'Sport and community', in Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) Sport sociology. Exeter: Learning Matters, pp.261-280.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281376
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1#tabview=toc
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813792013-04-16T10:54:42Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Class and gender differentiation in sport
Craig, Peter
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-16T09:15:56Z
2013-04-16T09:15:56Z
2010
Book chapter
Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (2010) 'Class and gender differentiation in sport', in Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) (2010) Sport sociology. Exeter: Learning Matters, pp.114-136.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281379
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1#tabview=toc
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813962019-08-10T16:41:30Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Sport and diversity: issues of race, ethnicity and disability
Craig, Peter
Beedie, Paul
2013-04-16T09:20:56Z
2013-04-16T09:20:56Z
2010
Book chapter
Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (2010) 'Sport and diversity: issues of race, ethnicity and disability', in Craig, P. and Beedie, P. (eds.) (2010) Sport sociology. Exeter: Learning Matters, pp.137-156.
9781844454648
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281396
en
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/Book238567?siteId=sage-uk&prodTypes=Books&q=Sport+Sociology+&fs=1#tabview=toc
Learning Matters
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2831922020-04-23T08:36:46Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The adventure enigma (The practice(s) of mountain based adventure tourists in Britain)
Beedie, Paul
tourism
adventure tourism
adventure
Powerpoint presentation
2013-04-19T10:41:52Z
2013-04-19T10:41:52Z
2012
Presentation
Beedie, P. (2012) ‘The Adventure Enigma’, Meanings, Markets & Magic, Adventure Conference: UHI West Highland College, Fort William, February 16th – 17th.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/283192
en
http://www.whc.uhi.ac.uk/research-old/centre-for-recreation-and-tourism-research/meanings-markets-and-magic-a-report-on-the-adventure
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816372013-04-17T14:08:00Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Research themes for tourism
Petrova, Petia
2013-04-17T13:08:00Z
2013-04-17T13:08:00Z
2011
Article
Petrove, P. (2011) 'Research themes for tourism', Journal of Heritage Tourism, 6 (3), pp.263-264.
1743-873X
1747-6631
10.1080/1743873X.2011.601882
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281637
Journal of Heritage Tourism
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1743873X.2011.601882
Archived with thanks to Journal of Heritage Tourism
Taylor and Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816172014-08-29T12:34:34Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Welcoming students within the academic community: research informed teaching (RiT), students’ research skills and the future of research Informed Learning (RiL)
Petrova, Petia
2013-04-17T13:05:35Z
2013-04-17T13:05:35Z
2010
Book chapter
Petrova, P. (2010) 'Welcoming Students within the academic community: Research informed teaching (RiT), students’ research skills and the future of research informed learning (RiL)'. In Atlay, M. (Ed.) Creating Bridges: A collection of articles relating to the implementation of the curriculum review 2008 (Cre8), from practitioners across the University of Bedfordshire. Luton: University of Bedfordshire.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281617
en
University of Bedfordshire
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813972020-03-25T10:57:13Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Using structured writing retreats to support novice researchers
Petrova, Petia
Coughlin, Annika
writing retreats
academic writing
continuing development
research
2013-04-16T09:23:31Z
2013-04-16T09:23:31Z
2012
Article
Petrova, P. and Coughlin, A. (2012) 'Using structured writing retreats to support novice researchers', International Journal for Researcher Development, 3 (1), pp.79-88.
2048-8696
10.1108/17597511211278661
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281397
International Journal for Researcher Development
en
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/17597511211278661
Emerald
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816182020-03-25T10:56:27Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Scholarship of teaching and learning: what role can writing retreats play?
Petrova, Petia
Coughlin, Annika
2013-04-17T13:07:05Z
2013-04-17T13:07:05Z
2010
Book chapter
Coughlin, A. and Petrova, P. (2010) 'Scholarship of teaching and learning: What role Can writing retreats play?' In Atlay, M. and Coughlin, A. (eds.) Creating communities: developing, enhancing and sustaining learning communities across the University of Bedfordshire. Luton: University of Bedfordshire.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281618
en
http://uobrep.openrepository.com/uobrep/handle/10547/623904
University of Bedfordshire
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816362013-04-18T11:04:15Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
To embed or not to embed? the embedding of PDP in the curriculum
Ujma, Dorota
Atlay, Mark
Petrova, Petia
2013-04-17T13:02:56Z
2013-04-17T13:02:56Z
2009
Book chapter
Ujma, D., Atlay, M. and Petrova, P. (2009) 'To embed or not to embed? The embedding of PDP in the curriculum'. In Buswell, J. & Becket, N. (eds.) Enhancing student centred learning in business and management, hospitality, leisure, sport, tourism. Newbury: Threshold Press Ltd.
978-1903152249
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281636
en
http://www.threshold-press.co.uk/education_books/catalogue.html
Threshold Press Ltd
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816352014-09-10T21:24:07Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Students' awareness of the importance of transferable skills for employability
Petrova, Petia
Ujma, Dorota
2013-04-17T12:59:08Z
2013-04-17T12:59:08Z
2006
Book chapter
Petrova, P. and Ujma, D. (2006) 'Students' awareness of the importance of transferable skills for employability'. In Becket, N. & Kemp, P. (eds.) Enhancing graduate employability in business and management, hospitality, leisure, sport, tourism. Newbury: Threshold Press Ltd, pp.148-154.
978-1-903152-15-7
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281635
en
http://www.threshold-press.co.uk/education_books/catalogue.html
Threshold Press Ltd
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2816382014-10-23T13:45:49Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Students and academics conceptions and experiences of research
Petrova, Petia
Atlay, Mark
2013-04-17T13:15:59Z
2013-04-17T13:15:59Z
2009
Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
Petrova, P. and Atlay, M. (2009) 'Students and academics conceptions and experiences of research', Society for Research into Higher Education Annual Conference, Celtic Manor Resort, Newport, Wales, 8-10 December.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281638
en
http://www.srhe.ac.uk/conference2009/list.session.asp?sessionID=F
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/2813742013-04-16T11:00:44Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
How valuable are tourism degrees? the views of the tourism industry
Petrova, Petia
Mason, Peter
tourism higher education
tourism employment
tourism
2013-04-16T08:58:26Z
2013-04-16T08:58:26Z
2004
Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
Petrova, P. and Mason, P. (2004) 'How valuable are tourism degrees? The views of the tourism industry', Association for Tourism in Higher Education, Annual Conference: Critical Issues in Tourism Education, Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire, UK. Great Missenden: Association for Tourism in Higher Education, pp.99-106.
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/281374
en
http://www.athe.org.uk/publications/guidelines_14.pdf
Association for Tourism in Higher Education
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/3362312020-04-23T08:39:57Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
A ‘reality of return’: the case of the Sarawakian-Chinese visiting China
Tie, Caroline
Holden, Andrew
Park, Hyung yu
University of Bedfordshire
Middlesex University
diaspora
interpretive ethnography
identity
hybridity
Sarawakian-Chinese
ambivalent connection to homeland
Using an interpretive ethnographic framework, this paper focuses on how travel to the homeland informs the identity of the Sarawakian-Chinese, a diaspora that contains a composite of subcultures. The data collection is based upon 35 semi-structured interviews and participant observation of a SarawakianChinese tour group to China. Whilst emotional connections with China are universally significant in constructing the diaspora's ethnic identity, the strength of association is influenced by characteristics of education, religion and language, as identity becomes re-defined and plural. The findings suggest that the influence of tourism to the homeland may not necessarily be significant in enhancing emotional and cultural connections with China. Instead, ambivalent connections to homeland become established during tourism experiences. Visits to the homeland could play a significant role in forging new and hybrid identities of ethnic communities outside the homeland, thereby bringing a new vital dimension to identity formation and communication of the Sarawakian-Chinese in the future.
2014-11-27T11:27:50Z
2014-11-27T11:27:50Z
2015
Article
Tie, C., Holden, A., Park, H. (2015) 'A ‘reality of return’: the case of the Sarawakian-Chinese visiting China', Tourism Management 47:206
0261-5177
10.1016/j.tourman.2014.09.021
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/336231
Tourism Management
en
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0261517714001976
Archived with thanks to Tourism Management
Elsevier
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5572122020-08-06T10:24:53Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Are relatives friends? disaggregating VFR Travel 1994-2014
Seaton, Tony
Tie, Caroline
University of Bedfordshire
N800 Tourism, Transport and Travel
travel
relatives
2015-06-18T09:54:54Z
2015-06-18T09:54:54Z
2015-06-01
Book chapter
Seaton, V. and Tie, C. (2015) 'Are Relatives Friends? Disaggregating VFR Travel 1994-2014' in Backer, E. and King, B. (eds.). VFR Travel Research: International Perspectives. Bristol: Channel View pp.28-45.
9781845415181
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/557212
en
https://www.degruyter.com/view/title/573635?language=en
Channel View Publications
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5945992020-04-23T07:37:37Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
(Re)viewing Cannibal Tours: lost in translation
Burns, Peter
Zafiri, Konstantina
Cannibal Tours
subtitles
postcolonial
host-guest encounters
visual evidence
critical discourse analysis
CDA
Papa New Guinea
PNG
The film Cannibal Tours powerfully portrays the impact of tourism in the Sepik region of Papua New Guinea through an array of host-guest encounters. Using text from the film as data, the present paper reveals new insights through a close analysis of the English subtitles given as translation for the Italian and German tourists. The subtitles are examined at three levels of equivalence to establish translation strategy and impact. The whole text is also be submitted to analysis using the critical discourse analysis (CDA) method. The findings have far-reaching implications on several levels. First, they are insightful for the study of tourism in developing destinations. Second, they confirm the significance of using visual data for research in the social sciences. Third, they demonstrate that translation in films can impact heavily on film meaning-making and viewer perception.
2016-01-22T13:27:56Z
2016-01-22T13:27:56Z
2012
Article
Burns, P., Zafiri, K. (2012) '(Re)viewing Cannibal Tours: lost in translation'. International Journal of Tourism Anthropology 2 (3):243
1759-0442
1759-0450
10.1504/IJTA.2012.050759
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594599
International Journal of Tourism Anthropology
en
http://www.inderscience.com/link.php?id=50759
Archived with thanks to International Journal of Tourism Anthropology
Inderscience
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5946162020-04-23T07:33:32Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Measuring the effect of subsidization on tourism demand and destination competitiveness through the AIDS model: an evidence-based approach to tourism policymaking
Mangion, Marie -Louise
Cooper, Chris
Cortés-Jiménez, Isabel
Durbarry, Ramesh
almost ideal demand system (aids)
evidence-based policy
inclusive tour holidays
Malta
policy evaluation
susidisation
There is increasing recognition of the need for improved policymaking in tourism and the consequent evaluation of tourism public policies. This paper demonstrates the usefulness of econometric modelling for tourism policy analysis, showing that crucial information is generated from such econometric policy analysis. A dynamic Almost Ideal Demand System (AIDS) model is used to quantify the impact on demand elasticity of Malta's policy of supporting British inclusive tour holidays. Such analysis can contribute to improved policymaking as the policymaker is informed about how and to what extent the market has responded to previous policies – thus promoting an evidence-based approach to tourism policymaking.
2016-01-22T14:10:14Z
2016-01-22T14:10:14Z
2012-12-01
Article
Mangion, M-L. et al (2012) 'Measuring the effect of subsidization on tourism demand and destination competitiveness through the AIDS model: an evidence-based approach to tourism policymaking' Tourism Economics 18 (6):1251
1354-8166
10.5367/te.2012.0167
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594616
Tourism Economics
en
http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/xref?genre=article&issn=1354-8166&volume=18&issue=6&spage=1251
Archived with thanks to Tourism Economics
IP Publishing
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5946112020-04-23T07:33:27Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Estimation of outbound Italian tourism demand: a monthly dynamic EC-LAIDS model
Cortés-Jiménez, Isabel
Durbarry, Ramesh
Pulina, Manuela
almost ideal
demand system (aids)
error correction
forecasting
Italian tourism demand
monthly frequency
An almost ideal demand system with monthly frequency, in both long-run and dynamic forms, is used to quantify the responsiveness of Italian tourism demand to changes in relative prices, exchange rates, expenditure and unexpected one-off events in four main European destinations. Short-term elasticities, which are crucial for policies regarding own price, as well as cross prices and expenditure elasticities are derived from the dynamic model. It is also found that the dynamic model outperforms the long-run model in forecasting accuracy. This paper provides useful information for policymakers to maintain high market shares of Italian tourism demand.
2016-01-22T13:58:03Z
2016-01-22T13:58:03Z
2009-09-01
Article
Cortés-Jiménez, I., Durbarry, R., Pulina, M. (2009) 'Estimation of outbound Italian tourism demand: a monthly dynamic EC-LAIDS model'. Tourism Economics 15 (3):547
13548166
10.5367/000000009789036594
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594611
Tourism Economics
en
http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/xref?genre=article&issn=1354-8166&volume=15&issue=3&spage=547
Archived with thanks to Tourism Economics
IP Publishing
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947592020-04-23T07:37:37Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Peer-to-peer capacity-building in tourism: values and experiences of field-based education
Novelli, Marina
Burns, Peter
educational tourism
field trips
field-based education
capacity building
The Gambia
Taking tourism as a metaphor for the complex and unequal relationship between the Majority World and the more affluent tourist-generating countries, this paper reports research into ways in which educational tourism can facilitate mutually beneficial exchanges between ‘hosts and guests’. The empirical work is based on data collected as part of an innovative field-based education project on international tourism development and management with field-based activities conducted in The Gambia. The paper aimed to show that if the exchange, both culturally and pragmatically, was to benefit not only the visiting students but also the host country, then values, cross-cultural interaction, innovation and knowledge exchange would have to play key roles to ensure that this peer-to-peer capacity-building opportunity though educational tourism would contribute to sustainable (tourism) development in the chosen locality.
2016-01-25T10:11:44Z
2016-01-25T10:11:44Z
2010-12
Article
Novelli, M., Burns, P. (2010) 'Peer-to-peer capacity-building in tourism: Values and experiences of field-based education' Development Southern Africa 27 (5):741
0376-835X
1470-3637
10.1080/0376835X.2010.522835
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594759
Development Southern Africa
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0376835X.2010.522835
Archived with thanks to Development Southern Africa
Taylor & Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947602020-04-23T08:39:56Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Politics and sustainable tourism development – can they co-exist? Voices from North Cyprus
Yasarata, Muhammet
Altinay, Levent
Burns, Peter
Okumus, Fevzi
Cyprus Premier Holidays Ltd
Oxford Brookes University
University of Brighton
University of Central Florida
small island
sustainable tourism development
agency theory
political issues
qualitative research
North Cyprus
Cyprus
This paper investigates ways in which political obstacles inhibit the formulation and implementation of sustainable tourism development in small-island developing states through the example of North Cyprus. The methodology draws on in-depth interviews and participant observation of significant actors in the tourism sector. The research findings suggest that understanding the intricate political system and power structure in a society is the key to understanding sustainable tourism policy development, planning and implementation. In the case of North Cyprus, policy development was found to be a product of political influence (referred to as ego-driven politics in the text), specifically the use of public resources as an instrument for political power, retention and that the politicisation of the public sector is the underlying cause of the weakened progress in sustainable tourism development. It is therefore essential to have a clear understanding of political issues, key political actors’ interests and how to mitigate personal interests to facilitate and maintain sustainable tourism development in such small states.
2016-01-25T10:17:25Z
2016-01-25T10:17:25Z
2010-06
Article
Yasarata, M. et al (2010) 'Politics and sustainable tourism development – Can they co-exist? Voices from North Cyprus'. Tourism Management 31 (3):345
0261-5177
10.1016/j.tourman.2009.03.016
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594760
Tourism Management
en
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0261517709000582
Archived with thanks to Tourism Management
Elsevier
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947742020-04-23T07:37:37Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The end of tourism? Climate change and societal challenges
Burns, Peter
Bibbings, Lyn
N890 Tourism, Transport and Travel not elsewhere classified
climate change
tourism
Starting with the assumption that socio-cultural aspects of tourism demand will need to change in response to global warming, this paper identifies business and consumer contradictions that highlight the complexities of dealing with climate change in an industry characterised by fragmented, global supply chains. The paper's approach is to problematise the issues into a series of research questions (related to ethical consumption, sustainability, policies, actions and communication) based on the premise that sustainable tourism is possible and desirable, but mitigation has to acknowledge the anthropogenic causes of climate change and responses should be underpinned by changing norms for any society that considers travel to be the ‘perfect freedom’.
2016-01-25T10:52:29Z
2016-01-25T10:52:29Z
2009-02
Article
Burns, P., Bibbings, L. (2009) 'The end of tourism? Climate change and societal challenges'. Twenty-First Century Society 4 (1):31
1745-0144
10.1080/17450140802642424
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594774
Twenty-First Century Society
en
http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&doi=10.1080/17450140802642424&magic=crossref||D404A21C5BB053405B1A640AFFD44AE3
http://eprints.brighton.ac.uk/6054/
Archived with thanks to Twenty-First Century Society
Taylor & Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947682020-04-23T07:33:28Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Tourism and the green economy: a place for an environmental ethic?
Holden, Andrew
sustainable tourism
green economy
environmental conservation
environmental ethics
ecocentric
anthropocentric
sustainability
Tourism has been recognized by major multilateral world agencies, the World Bank, IMF and United Nations, as a key economic sector for achieving a global transition from a brown to a green economic system. This transition includes an incumbent ethical mission, seeking to improve 'human well-being and social equity, while significantly reducing environmental risks and ecological scarcities' (UNEP 2011: 1ndash;2). Nevertheless, five key challenges have been identified to tourism playing its part in fulfilling the aims of a green economy, four of which are directly related to its interaction with the natural environment and encompass a strong behavioural component. They are: a consumer trend to travel further for shortening durations of time; a preference for energy-intensive transportation based upon non-renewable fuel usage with an accompanying growth in GHG emissions; excessive water consumption; and damage to marine and terrestrial biodiversity. Simultaneously, the United Nations Environment Programme holds that the driving force of the greening of the tourism industry is consumer demand. The favoured approach from the World Bank and IMF to change environmentally destructive behaviour and reflect the full costs of an increasing ecological scarcity is through price and market correction. Other favoured approaches place a reliance on the greening of technology as a solution to environmental problems. This paper argues that these measures will not be sufficient to deal with the environmental challenges facing the tourism industry and system, and that without a stronger environmental ethic in the market it will be difficult to impose controls on tourists behaviour designed for environmental conservation. It subsequently analyzes the conceptualization of environmental ethics, the rationale for the evolution of an environmental ethic in society and evaluates its relevance to the tourism market.
2016-01-25T11:10:03Z
2016-01-25T11:10:03Z
2015-01-12
Article
Holden, A. (2015) 'Tourism and the Green Economy: A Place for an Environmental Ethic?'. Tourism Recreation Research 38 (1):3
0250-8281
2320-0308
10.1080/02508281.2013.11081725
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594768
Tourism Recreation Research
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02508281.2013.11081725
Archived with thanks to Tourism Recreation Research
Taylor & Francis
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947692020-04-23T07:33:29Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
Using the panel cointegration approach to analyse the determinants of tourism demand in South Africa
Seetanah, Boopen
Durbarry, Ramesh
Ragodoo, J.F. Nicolas
dynamic panel data
price sensitivity
South Africa
tourism demand
Estimating tourism demand has become a challenge among researchers, as identification of key determinants is important for policymakers at a time when tourism has become the world's largest industry. Using a theoretical framework based on the gravity model, this paper models inbound tourism demand for South Africa to estimate price and income sensitivities as well as the impact of other important factors that affect tourist flows, such as the location of markets and socio-political factors. Given the non-stationary but cointegrated nature of the panel data, panel cointegration estimation techniques are employed. The results show that tourists are sensitive to price changes in South Africa and also to tourism price changes in competing destinations. The level of development, tourism infrastructure, distance (or transportation costs), common border and language are also found to affect arrivals. The results also indicate the need to conduct estimation by regional groupings for a better understanding of different markets.
2016-01-25T11:18:43Z
2016-01-25T11:18:43Z
2010-09-01
Article
Seetanah, B., Durbarry, R., Ragodoo, J.F.N. (2010) 'Using the panel cointegration approach to analyse the determinants of tourism demand in South Africa'. Tourism Economics16 (3):715
1354-8166
10.5367/000000010792278437
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594769
Tourism Economics
en
http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/xref?genre=article&issn=1354-8166&volume=16&issue=3&spage=715
Archived with thanks to Tourism Economics
IP Publishing
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947332020-04-23T07:33:27Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The determinants of tourism demand in South Africa using a dynamic panel data approach
Durbarry, Ramesh
Nicolas, J.F.
Seetanah, Boopen
dynamic panel data
South Africa
tourism demand
This article models inbound tourism demand for South Africa using a theoretical framework that is based on the gravity model and provides elasticity estimates that are useful for policy purposes. It uses a well-established gravity model following Anderson and van Wincoop's model (2003) to explain tourism flows. The article departs from most of the existing work estimating tourism demand and builds on the recent work of Durbarry, but employs a dynamic panel data setting. The results show that tourists are not too sensitive to changes in the tourism price of South Africa, indicating that it offers a unique product and experience to tourists. In fact, evidence tends to suggest that competing destinations may imploy tourism products that are unique to their destinations in the region. The level of development and tourism infrastructure also affect arrivals. It is also found that distance negatively affects arrivals, but common border and language play an important role. The dynamic model supports the presence of repeat tourism and positive word-of-mouth, particularly from European and American origins.
2016-01-25T10:47:40Z
2016-01-25T10:47:40Z
2009-10-01
Article
Durbarry, R., Nicolas, J.F., Seetanah, B. (2009) 'The Determinants of Tourism Demand in South Africa Using a Dynamic Panel Data Approach' Tourism Analysis 14 (3):375
1083-5423
10.3727/108354209789704968
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594733
Tourism Analysis
en
http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/xref?genre=article&issn=1083-5423&volume=14&issue=3&spage=375
Archived with thanks to Tourism Analysis
Cognizant Communication Corporation
oai:uobrep.openrepository.com:10547/5947752020-04-23T07:33:27Zcom_10547_132180col_10547_132223
The seductions of “soft power”: the call for multifronted research into the articulative reach of tourism in China
Hollinshead, Keith
Hou, Chun Xiao
China
tourism
In recent years, tourism has been increasingly posited as not just that set of ordinary promotional processes by which destinations are projected to visitors from afar (and by which those holiday-makers/trippers are managed there) but also as that mix of political and aspirational activities through which institutions and interest groups variously collaborate and contend to solidify particular visions of their supposed culture, heritage, and nature for not only distant/external others but for their own proximal/internal selves. Working from these later/broader perspectives, this article calls for a much richer critique of the ways in which China itself is articulated. Drawing particularly from Bell's (2008) scrutiny of Confucian orientations to the world and from Nyíri's (2006) examination of declarative agency of and over tourism, this article calls for deeper and more sustained critique of the conceivable “soft power” normalizations of China through tourism today.
2016-01-25T11:05:09Z
2016-01-25T11:05:09Z
2012-07
Article
Hollinshead, K., Hou, C.X. (2012) 'The Seductions of “Soft Power”: The Call for Multifronted Research Into the Articulative Reach of Tourism in China'. Journal of China Tourism Research 8 (3):227
1938-8160
1938-8179
10.1080/19388160.2012.703923
http://hdl.handle.net/10547/594775
Journal of China Tourism Research
en
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/19388160.2012.703923
Archived with thanks to Journal of China Tourism Research
Taylor & Francis