852 research outputs found
Travel, tourism, climate change and behavioral change: travelers’ perspectives from a developing country, Nigeria
While studies have examined people's understanding of climate change and its relationship to tourism, these focus largely on developed country populations. Much future tourism growth will come from developing countries following economic development; often countries where climate change will be strongly felt. Do tourists from developing countries have the same knowledge gaps about travel, tourism, and climate change as in the developed world? Will behavioral change policies be successful in encouraging more environmentally friendly approaches to climate change and tourism in developing countries? This paper presents findings from 20 in-depth interviews with active Nigerian tourists, analyzing their understanding of climate change, the links known, or not, between their travel and climate change, and their willingness to change their tourism patterns. Understanding of climate change was limited and there was conceptual confusion. Participants did not view their own travel as a cause of climate change and many were embedded in air travel practice. Participants were unwilling to change their tourism patterns to reduce their contribution to climate change. Significant structural barriers limit low carbon tourism travel in Nigeria (and other developing countries), including reliability, availability safety, and speed. Behavioral change will be difficult to achieve
Study on Chinese Tourism Web Sites' Distribution and Online Marketing Effects.
As a platform and carrier of tourism information, tourism websites (TWs) and online tourism marketing have deeply affected the tourism industry. The authors adopt a geographical perspective to analyze the distribution of Chinese tourism websites (CTWs), and statistical analysis with SPSS16.0 was conducted to explore the online marketing effects of CTWs, and some meaningful results has been produced: 1) The number of CTWs generally decreases from eastern China to central and western China, and are especially dominant in tourism developed provinces. 2) The number of tourists has strong statistical correlation with the number of CTWs. 3) The strongest correlation for inbound tourists is with hotel websites, and the highest correlation coefficient is 0.807 between the number of domestic tourist and resort websites. Both inbound and domestic tourists have a low correlation coefficient with travel agency websites (TA). 4) There exist some statistical models between tourist numbers and different kinds of CTWs. The results clearly unveil the marketing effects and correlation of CTWs and is helpful for further online marketing strategies
Gender in Tourism Research: Perspectives from Latin America
Purpose
This paper aims to examine the knowledge production on tourism gender research in Latin America and to reflect on the main challenges faced by this subfield.
Design/methodology/approach
The study conducts a bibliometric analysis of the journal articles on tourism gender research in the largest scientific databases in Latin America: Redalyc, Scielo and Latindex. The paper examines variables such as year of publication, journal, authors, affiliation, types of articles, research topics, methodologies and geographical location of fieldwork.
Findings
The study identified 153 gender aware papers from 70 journals for the period 2001-2015. The leading countries in the subfield are Brazil, Mexico and Argentina. The majority of papers are empirical and have a local scope. The main theoretical approaches derive from sociological and anthropological perspectives with a predominance of qualitative methodologies. There is a need to strengthen the theoretical and epistemological frameworks and increase international collaboration for knowledge exchange among tourism gender scholars.
Research limitations/implications
The bibliometric analysis was limited to indexed journals with online access. It focused on academic articles and excluded research notes, book reviews and conference proceedings.
Originality/value
As the main working languages of scientific production in Latin America are Spanish and Portuguese, this is the first attempt to make tourism gender research from this region visible for the predominantly Anglophone tourism academy, with the intention of identifying common challenges
Canary in the coalmine: Norwegian attitudes towards climate change and extreme long-haul air travel to Aotearoa/New Zealand
Accelerating global climate change poses considerable challenges to all societies and
economies. The European Union now targets a 20% reduction in CO2 emissions by 2020. Indeed, the
Labour-led Norwegian government is committed to carbon neutrality across all sectors of the economy
by 2030. Aviation has been identified as a rapidly growing contributor to CO2 emissions. This article
reports on a research project that explored Norwegian attitudes towards climate change, particularly
as they relate to extreme long-haul air travel to Aotearoa/New Zealand. It reveals that the 'dream trip'
to New Zealand for Norwegians is still largely intact. It also finds evidence of 'air travel with a carbon
conscience' arising from growing concern for high frequency discretionary air travel. Evidence of
denial of the climate impact of air travel that recent studies have revealed was largely absent.
Interviewees expressed a greater concern for short-haul air travel emissions than for the climate
impact of long-haul travel. However, intentions to adapt long-haul travel behaviours were expressed,
highlighting the need to monitor consumer attitudes towards the impact of air travel on climate
change. We conclude that Norway is a vanguard European tourism market in terms of climate
sensitivity
Exploring Well-being as a Tourism Product Resource
This study employs a qualitative research approach where focus groups (n ÂĽ 11) with key stakeholders were used to understand how tourism investors view the concept of well-being in relation to tourism and the potential to use it as a tourism product resource. Findings validated by a wider group (n ÂĽ 50) exposed the barriers and enablers of implementing well-being in this way. The potential for businesses and policymakers to transform these barriers into enablers was also identified. In addition, study findings were mapped onto a robust model extracted from the public health sector and applied in a tourism context using a systems theory approach. This further highlighted the potential offered to the fields of public health and tourism in the concept of well-being, and demonstrated the well-being value of tourism. Data from this research will aid tourism business practice and development by embedding a well-being philosophy for tourism destinations' strategies
Divided we stand: institutional collaboration in tourism planning and development in the Central Region of Ghana
This research is an exploratory study that examines collaboration at the institutional level in the tourism sector of the Central Region, Ghana. The research begins with a review of the key issues related to collaboration in tourism planning and development followed by an extensive exploration of three main issues related to institutional collaboration in tourism in the Central Region. The three main issues are the vision of tourism development shared among stakeholders, collaboration and coordination within the public sector and between the public and private sectors and the factors that constrain and facilitate collaboration and coordination. Using extensive interviews with key stakeholders and reviewing policy documents, the research indicates low levels of collaboration between tourism institutions both within the public sector and across the public?private sectors. This is notwithstanding a shared awareness of the benefits of collaboration among all actors. The research thus contributes interesting insights into the politics of collaboration in tourism destinations. Given tourism's contribution to the Ghanaian economy, it is imperative that efforts are made towards improving the levels of collaboration and coordination between tourism agencies and institutions
Is small beautiful? Understanding the contribution of small businesses in township tourism to economic development
The increased importance attached by policy-makers to the anticipated developmental effects of tourism in developing countries has been insufficiently examined by academic researchers, particularly in the context of the contribution of small firms in urban areas. This deficiency is addressed by providing a review of existing research followed by an analysis of interviews with 90 tourism business located within and outside the townships of Langa and Imizamo Yethu, Cape Town, South Africa. The findings reveal tensions between the different actors involved in township tourism. While the involvement of small, locally owned, businesses is beneficial, it is limited by conflicts of interest, lack of trust, limited social networks and little attachment to the township locality. The discussion highlights the complexity of tourism's role in economic development, which has significant implications for local policy-makers
Impact of Taiwan open policy on Chinese tourist satisfaction
The Taiwan government has imposed a daily visitation quota with strict regulations on Chinese visitor travel modes, length of stay, and visa authorizations since July 2008. This highly controlled scheme was an attempt to maintain service quality on top of security and political considerations. The purpose of this study is to provide in-depth analysis regarding the Chinese tourist satisfaction over time under different travel modes. The results indicated that package tour (PT) visitors generally gave higher satisfaction scores than free and independent travel (FIT) visitors. However, PT visitors demonstrated a decreased level of satisfaction on their tour arrangements of hotels, meals, itineraries. Addressing safety and
environmental issues is the priority task in order to provide quality travel services
Coastal scenic assessment and tourism management in western Cuba
Coastal scenic assessments via checklist tables (18 natural, 8 human related parameters), can provide
benchmark measures regarding desirable/non-desirable beach conditions and also classify sites. The
scenic value for 43 sites in western Cuba was investigated, with the aim of helping managers improve
bathing areas, especially for tourism purposes. Sites were categorised from Class 1, (top grade scenery),
between La Habana and Matanzas, as extremely attractive, with white sand, turquoise water and
additional scenic elements. Class 2 sites were located in Varadero, and their high scores were greatly due
to appropriate human interventions, e.g. beach nourishment and dune restoration works. Classes 3 to 5
(the latter having very poor scenery), included sites with low scores for natural parameters. For these
sites, coastal managers can do little to alleviate scenic impact, apart from addressing the human parameters,
where improvement is possible, e.g. by litter removal together with the present chaotic protective
structures
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