207 research outputs found

    The precinct experience: a phenomenological approach

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    An examination of the extant literature relating to urban tourism in general, and historic precincts in particular, highlights the predominantly structural and functional nature of existing research. Issues such as spatial form, land-use mix, developmen

    Sydney: Beyond iconicity

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    Urban Tourism Research. Developing an Agenda

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    The study of urban tourism and associated focus on urban tourist precincts is a growing area of interest as practitioners, researchers and policy makers seek to understand the phenomenon of tourism within the urban environment. In Australia research in this area has lacked integration and has not engaged sufficiently with the contextual setting of the urban environment. This paper reports on a study that was undertaken to identify the important areas that should be included in an urban tourism research agenda. This paper has three aims: to review the literature on urban tourism; to outline the process that was undertaken to identify areas for urban tourism research; and to present a conceptual framework that can be used to focus future urban tourism research. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    A Scoping Study of Business Events: Beyond Tourism Benefits

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    The purpose of this study is to provide an empirically-based assessment of the range and impact of contributions made by business events to host communities beyond the tourism dimension. This project is classified as a scoping study, delivering baseline data on which future stages of research could be built. Future stages of the project could be designed to deliver quantitative data on the contributions made by business events to complement the more qualitative focus of this study. It is well established that business events make a substantial contribution to the Australian economy from a tourism perspective. However, the Business Events Council of Australia (2009a) argues that impacts from business events in areas such as innovation, education, networking, trade, research and practice are likely to far outweigh the financial returns of the tourism spend. They have called for evidence-based research to be undertaken in this area (Business Events Council of Australia 2009b

    Understanding Tourism Experiences and Behaviour in Cities: An Australian Case Study

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    This study aims to enhance the understanding of tourist experiences and behaviour in urban destinations by analysing the spatial movements of tourists, identifying the key attributes they are seeking in urban destinations, determining how important these attributes are to their experiences, evaluating how two urban destinations performed in relation to these attributes, and assessing whether there are key differences between different types of visitors to urban destinations. The ultimate aim of this project is to inform and guide the future governance and improved functioning of urban tourism destinations by developing a better understanding of the tourist in such settings

    Framing the Hayllar Sisters: a multi-genre biography of four English Victorian painters

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    This is a multi-genre biography of the sisters Jessica, Edith, Mary and Kate Hayllar, artists who worked in England from the 1880s until the end of the nineteenth century. It examines relevant historical details and documents based on and around the Hayllar sisters lives and examines their paintings closely. It includes fictional vignettes at the conclusion of each chapter based on the information and discussion in that chapter, drawing together facts and issues raised there and focusing on examples of their work. As an imaginative reconstruction of particular incidents and family relationships, the fiction has the potential to enhance an understanding of the circumstances surrounding the sisters art production. In the small body of scholarship on the Hayllars, they are recognised as women whose only training was at home with their father, and they are primarily perceived as artists whose representations of women supported the hegemonic belief in domestic femininity. This biography, while accepting that their lives and work embody contemporary attitudes and traditions, suggests that the sisters were in many ways modern women, who painted to earn an income, and whose pictures exploited and occasionally subverted those prevailing beliefs. The dissertation examines the Hayllar sisters in relation to their Victorian and familial context, their education, the influences affecting their work, and their reception by their contemporaries. It also looks critically at the small group of scholars who have more recently discussed examples of the sisters work. While their story is unique in its family aspects, it is similar to, and so throws some light on, the lives and limitations of many English women artists of this period

    7 A tale of two caravan parks: friendship, community and the freedom thing Tourism Today -Fall 2007 -Full Paper A tale of two caravan parks: friendship, community and the freedom thing

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    ABSTRACT This paper presents the findings of a research project that explored notions of friendship and community in the context of caravan park holidays for repeat visitors to two caravan parks. The study was conducted by way of in-depth interview with 22 visitors to a caravan park on the south coast of News South Wales (Australia) in 2006 and 20 visitors to a caravan park in far north Queensland (Australia) in 2007. For both parks the findings indicate that the major attractions of caravan park holidays for long term repeat visitors are the friendships that build up over years of repeat visitation, and the relaxing lifestyle that the holiday affords. For the older and smaller of the parks the respondents also reported that a strong sense of community existed among the visitors and that this was a very satisfying feature of their holiday experience. There was less mention of a sense of community from respondents at the larger and more recently established park. Theoretical implications: there is an emerging literature documenting the possibilities of 'serious leisure' and 'focal leisure activities' as significant investment channels in the accumulation of social capital. This paper supports the theory that focal leisure activities can foster the development of a sense of community, however, our findings indicate that factors influencing this growth may include the "age" of the group and also the size of the group. Management and marketing implications: caravan park (and other tourist service) organisations may benefit from including notions of friendship and community in their marketing campaigns rather than the usual narrow focus upon facilities From a management perspective it may be useful to consider programming activities and providing amenities that facilitate social engagement and communal activity

    New Deal for Disabled People : survey of registrants – report of Cohort 3

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    The New Deal for Disabled People (NDDP) was implemented nationally in July 2001. It is a voluntary programme that aims to help people on incapacity benefits move into sustained employment. NDDP is delivered by a national network of local Job Brokers comprising public, private and voluntary sector providers of varying types and levels of work-focused support and assistance. The evaluation design for the programme includes a Survey of the Registrants, which aims to obtain information on NDDP participant characteristics, their experiences of, and views on, the programme. The survey involves three cohorts, with the first two having two waves of interviewing and the third one wave. This report is of the third cohort. The survey for the third cohort entailed face-to-face Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) interviews with people who were registered between August and October 2004 as NDDP participants on the Evaluation Database. The sample was stratified by whether or not registrants were within Pathways to Work pilot areas and whether they had registered with new or existing Job Brokers. Disproportionately large numbers of those within Pathways areas and those with new brokers were sampled to allow robust analysis of these groups. The survey fieldwork was conducted between February and May 2005. After the opt-out process, and after identifying those out of scope, the field response rate was 77 per cent. The 2,531 interviews achieved represent an overall response rate of 64 per cent. Where the respondent had a partner living in their household, and the partner was available, a short interview with the partner was also conducted. If the partner was unavailable for interview it was possible for the interviewer to conduct the interview by proxy (with the respondent on behalf of the partner)
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