30 results on '"Cheer, Joseph M"'
Search Results
2. Inclusive and regenerative urban tourism: capacity development perspectives
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Bellato, Loretta and Cheer, Joseph M.
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- 2021
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3. Global tourism in crisis: conceptual frameworks for research and practice
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Cheer, Joseph M., Lapointe, Dominic, Mostafanezhad, Mary, and Jamal, Tazim
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- 2021
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4. Transformative epistemologies for regenerative tourism: towards a decolonial paradigm in science and practice?
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Bellato, Loretta, Frantzeskaki, Niki, Lee, Emma, Cheer, Joseph M., and Peters, Andrew
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SUSTAINABILITY ,TOURISM research ,RESEARCH methodology ,GREY literature ,DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
There is a growing scholarly interest in the potential of regenerative tourism approaches to address sustainability challenges. Drawing from an ecological worldview that interweaves Indigenous and Western knowledge systems, regenerative tourism approaches seek to increase the capacity of support systems for fulfilling net-positive social-ecological effects. We argue that Western scientific paradigms drive current tourism research methodologies and are sometimes insufficient and unfit to (advance) regenerative tourism research. The extent to which new research methodological approaches can align with the ecological worldview and regenerative paradigm is an underpinning premise. As part of a broader study of the emerging regenerative tourism concept, a scoping review of 84 peer-reviewed and 116 grey literature articles, supplemented by consultations with nine regenerative tourism practitioners, six Indigenous practitioners and one cultural knowledge holder, identified nine research gaps that explicate this mismatch. An analytical framework guided the gap analysis and the formulation of a future research agenda. Findings suggest that tourism scholarship is not keeping pace with the evolution of regenerative tourism, requiring additional and new approaches. A transformational decolonial, transdisciplinary research paradigm is proposed that fully embraces the regenerative tourism paradigm and thus enables knowledge production that facilitates plural regenerative tourism futures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The search for spirituality in tourism: Toward a conceptual framework for spiritual tourism
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Cheer, Joseph M., Belhassen, Yaniv, and Kujawa, Joanna
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- 2017
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6. Yoga tourism: Commodification and western embracement of eastern spiritual practice
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Bowers, Hana and Cheer, Joseph M.
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- 2017
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7. Sustainable tourism development: Towards resilience in tourism
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Cheer, Joseph M and Lew, Alan A
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- 2017
8. An Empire of Air and Water: Uncolonizable Space in the British Imagination, 1750-1850
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Tamborrel, Lourdes Zamanillo and Cheer, Joseph M.
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Literature/writing ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
Siobhan Carroll, An Empire of Air and Water: Uncolonizable Space in the British Imagination, 1750-1850 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), 290 pp., ISBN 9780812246780, $59.95 (Cloth). 'If a tree [...]
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- 2018
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9. TOURISM AND TRADITIONAL CULTURE: LAND DIVING IN VANUATU
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Cheer, Joseph M., Reeves, Keir J., and Laing, Jennifer H.
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- 2013
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10. Tourism, the SDGs and partnerships.
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Scheyvens, Regina and Cheer, Joseph M.
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TOURISM , *BUSINESS partnerships , *STAKEHOLDERS , *SUSTAINABLE tourism - Abstract
In 2019, Massey University in New Zealand hosted the world's first research conference on tourism and the Sustainable Developments Goal (SDGs). The aims of this conference were to bring together a wide range of stakeholders to discuss (i) challenges to tourism contributing to the SDGs, and (ii) ways in which tourism can deliver on its potential to be more inclusive, equitable and sustainable. The need for diverse actors to work in partnership to achieve the SDGs emerged as a key theme. This special issue presents several of the papers from that conference, as well as contributions from a broader range of scholars. As is evident in this collection, partnerships in tourism tend to be complex, multi-faceted, subject to multiple legal frameworks and governance arrangements, and are often cross-sectoral, transnational and cross-border. While these overlapping factors can make it challenging for tourism actors to develop effective partnerships to deliver on the SDGs, the articles herein suggest there is considerable promise where stakeholders have shared values and commitments. Tourism scholars need to reflect more on possibilities for constructive partnerships because, as the pandemic milieu has demonstrated, partnerships spanning governments, industries and communities are a fundamental requirement to producing more sustainable tourism futures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Cultural ecosystem services and placemaking in peripheral areas: a tourism geographies agenda.
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Cheer, Joseph M., Mary, Mary, and Lew, Alan A.
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ECOSYSTEM services , *TOURISM , *REGIONAL economic disparities , *PLACE attachment (Psychology) , *GEOGRAPHY , *HERITAGE tourism - Abstract
The framework of tourism: Towards a definition of tourism, tourist, and the tourist industry. By taking CES as the point of departure, this Special Section offers novel perspectives on enduring questions for tourism geographies regarding the practices, politics, and ethics of placemaking in tourism. In a time of rapidly shifting tourism geographies in which rising rents, the COVID-19 pandemic, and rural gentrification have triggered widespread urban-to-rural migration, placemaking in peripheral areas has become an increasingly critical research agenda for tourism geographers. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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12. Community art festivals and sustainable rural revitalisation.
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Qu, Meng and Cheer, Joseph M.
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ART festivals , *SUSTAINABLE tourism , *SUSTAINABLE development , *SOCIAL sustainability , *COMMUNITY development - Abstract
The links between art events and sustainable development in rural contexts where revitalisation is pressing is becoming increasingly obvious. The village of Mitarai is an example of a small peripheral community in Japan faced with the impacts of depopulation, ageing and socio-economic decline. The urgency to stem further regression has seen art emerge as an antidote for community strengthening. Since 2017, Shiosai, a week-long community art festival has taken place with the underlying aim to rejuvenate the area's diminishing fortunes. It exhibits artworks paying homage to local islandscapes (Cheer, Cole, Reeves & Kato, 2017) and employs local cultural heritage as key elements. The extent to which bottom-up art events in small rural communities can serve as a vehicle for sustainable development is examined. Findings suggest that the Shiosai drives visitation to the area and has reinvigorated latent cultural heritage. The festival stimulates inward migration and enhances community resilience and vital social capital. However, as the festival is driven from the bottom-up without external support, the extent of future local-level involvement remains a critical success factor. The implications suggest that community engagement is a vital ingredient in the mobilisation of festivals in rural contexts, as well as in ensuring that sustainable development outcomes can be optimised. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Peak-bagging and cartographic misrepresentations: a call to correction.
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Apollo, Michal, Mostowska, Joanna, Maciuk, Kamil, Wengel, Yana, Jones, Thomas E., and Cheer, Joseph M.
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GLOBAL Positioning System ,MARKETING management ,TOURISM impact ,ALTITUDES ,PLACE marketing ,SEA level - Abstract
Tourists put their trust in maps and guidebooks and they expect information within to be accurate. Unfortunately, vital information can often be incorrect such as the accuracy of altitude above sea level. Cartographic misrepresentations and the impact on tourism is the focus of this study. Altitude data from maps, guidebooks and summit signs were compared with professional measurements made by precise Global Navigation Satellite Systems receivers. Findings revealed significant discrepancies in reported peak altitudes ranging from a few and up to several hundred metres. Evidently, some of the highest summits of the mountain ranges are subject to degradation and/or change over time and this underlines cartographic misrepresentations. There are possibly other inaccuracies in scores of popular peaks around the globe and rectifying erroneous information is vital for peak-bagging visitors. The results of this exploratory stud have significant implications for the management and marketing of destinations when a mountain's popularity is based around being the highest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Tourism geographies in the 'Asian Century'.
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Sin, Harng Luh, Mostafanezhad, Mary, and Cheer, Joseph M.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,TOURISM ,TWENTIETH century ,GEOGRAPHY ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
From the British Century of the 1800s to the American Century of the 1900s to the contemporary Asian Century, tourism geographies are deeply entangled in broader shifts in geopolitical power (Luce, 1999; Scott, 2008; Shenkar, 2006). This paper considers what the transition into the Asian Century means for some of the most urgent issues of our time such as sustainable development, human rights, gender equality, and environmental change. We critique Anglo-Western centrism in tourism theory and call on tourism scholars to make radical shifts toward more inclusive epistemology and praxis. In the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic, the significance of the themes addressed are more urgent than ever. The pandemic has hastened claims that the Asian century has further accelerated given the contrasting successes of many Asia-Pacific countries, especially as compared to their Euro-American counterparts (Park, 2020). As critical tourism scholars, we are faced with an unprecedented situation, even as the pandemic looks set to become globally endemic and the true extent of its fullest impacts are only beginning to emerge, with more to surface in the years ahead. That the world faces increasing turmoil is abundantly clear. Yet, amidst the disruption to the everyday, it is hope and compassion, but also political-economic restructuring that is needed to reset the tourism industry in more sustainable, equitable, and ethical directions (Cheer, 2020; Lew, Cheer, Haywood, Brouder, Salazar, 2020; Mostafanezhad, 2020). While in no uncertain terms, the pandemic has forever changed the tourism industry as we once knew it, it is our hope that we can collectively build on the momentum of the inclusive scholarship that Critical Tourism Studies-Asia Pacific is renowned for (Edelheim, 2020; Pernecky, 2020) as we pause to reflect on the possibilities and challenges of tourism in a post-pandemic Asian Century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Visitor diversification in pilgrimage destinations: comparing national and international visitors through means-end.
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Progano, Ricardo Nicolas, Kato, Kumi, and Cheer, Joseph M.
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PILGRIMS & pilgrimages ,INTERNATIONAL visitors ,SPIRITUALITY ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,SACRED space ,TOURIST attractions ,MODERN society ,SIMILARITY (Psychology) - Abstract
Copyright of Tourism Geographies is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2021
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16. Visions of travel and tourism after the global COVID-19 transformation of 2020.
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Lew, Alan A., Cheer, Joseph M., Haywood, Michael, Brouder, Patrick, and Salazar, Noel B.
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COVID-19 , *TOURISM , *TRAVEL hygiene , *ORGANIZATIONAL resilience , *INDUSTRIAL policy , *TOURISM websites , *COVID-19 pandemic , *BEHAVIOR - Published
- 2020
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17. Human flourishing, tourism transformation and COVID-19: a conceptual touchstone.
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Cheer, Joseph M.
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COVID-19 , *TOURISM impact , *TOURISM , *SUSTAINABLE tourism - Abstract
As the planet remains in the grips of COVID-19 and amidst enforced lockdowns and restrictions, and possibly the most profound economic downturn since the Great Depression, the resounding enquiry asks—what will the new normal look like? And, in much the same way, tourism aficionados, policy makers and communities are asking a similar question—what will the tourism landscape, and indeed the world, look like after the pandemic? As casualties from the crisis continue to fall by the wayside, the rethinking about what an emergent tourism industry might resemble is on in earnest. Many are hopeful that this wake-up call event is an opportunity to reshape tourism into a model that is more sustainable, inclusive and caring of the many stakeholders that rely on it. And some indicators, though not all, point in that direction. In line with this, the concept of 'human flourishing' offers merits as an alternative touchstone for evaluating the impacts of tourism on host communities. Human flourishing has a long genesis and its contemporary manifestation, pushed by COVID-19 and applied to travel and tourism, further expands the bounds of its application. Human flourishing has the potential to offer more nuanced sets of approaches by which the impact of tourism on host communities might be measured. The challenge remaining is how to develop robust indices to calibrate human flourishing policy successes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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18. Geopolitical anxieties of tourism: (Im)mobilities of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Mostafanezhad, Mary, Cheer, Joseph M, and Sin, Harng Luh
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- 2020
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19. Editorial - Responsible Tourism: A Call to Action for Turbulent Times.
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Ting, Hiram, Lim Xin Jean, Leong Choi Meng, Jun-Hwa Cheah, and Cheer, Joseph M.
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TOURISM ,COVID-19 ,VALUE creation ,LITERARY sources - Abstract
The magnitude in which global crises and the ongoing societal challenges affects our life has called for attentions to be more socially responsible, environmentally friendly and caring for the wider community. A lot has been said recently about tourism restart or recovery as a consequence of COVID-19, highlighting the need for greater pragmatism and responsibility in the midst of turbulence, further emphasising the relevance for responsible tourism practice and scholarship. The present editorial serves as a foundation that provides an overview of the development of responsible tourism, offering a synthesis of key literature and sources regarding responsible tourism that can help guide future investigations. A bibliometric analysis of responsible tourism was conducted in Web of Science (WOS) database and subsequently 94 articles were used in the final review. While the results show the relevance of sustainable practices, behavioural factors and value creation by multiple stakeholders, they underscore the need for more and better efforts to delve into and realise responsible tourism in the contemporary environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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20. Overtourism and degrowth: a social movements perspective.
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Milano, Claudio, Novelli, Marina, and Cheer, Joseph M.
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TOURIST attractions ,SOCIAL movements ,TOURISM ,SAVINGS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Overtourism is a contemporary phenomenon, rapidly evolving and underlined by what is evidently excessive visitation to tourist destinations. This is obvious in the seemingly uncontrolled and unplanned occurrence of urban overtourism in popular destinations and arguably a consequence of unregulated capital accumulation and growth strategies heavily associated with selling cities as tourism commodities. The vested interests of social movements has converged into growing protests against overtourism and associated degrowth campaigns have emerged out of this activism that calls for alternative governance and management measures that eschew touristic monoculture and simplistic economic growth-oriented models. Accordingly, we explore the evolution of the tourism degrowth discourse among social movement activists in Barcelona, and in particular, where this is related to claims associated with overtourism and the extent to which this might be influencing a paradigm shift from 'tourism growth' to 'tourism degrowth'. Methodologically, we draw from an overarching framework that leverages long-term ethnographic research in Barcelona. Here, we employ in-depth semi-structured interviews, participant observations, informal conversations and retrospective evaluation of field diary entries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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21. Tourism and community resilience in the Anthropocene: accentuating temporal overtourism.
- Author
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Cheer, Joseph M., Milano, Claudio, and Novelli, Marina
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TOURISM , *COMMUNITY development , *ECONOMIC development , *ECOLOGICAL resilience , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Global tourism growth is unprecedented. Consequently, this has elevated the sector as a key plank for economic development, and its utility is deeply embedded in political, economic and social-ecological discourse. Where the expansion of the sector leverages natural and cultural landscapes, this applies pressure to social and ecological underpinnings that if not reconciled, can become problematic. The way this plays out in Australia's Shipwreck Coast and the wider Great Ocean Road region, especially the implications for community resilience, is the focus. Emphasis is placed on the vulnerability of peripheral coastal areas to development that withdraws from destination endowments, yet fails to provide commensurate economic yield as a suitable trade-off. This is obvious where tourism intensification has led to concerns about the breach of normative carrying capacities. Temporal overtourism driven by seasonal overcrowding is countenanced as emblematic of tourism in the Anthropocene where focus tends to be largely growth-oriented, with much less attention given to bolstering social-ecological resilience, especially community resilience. At stake is the resilience of regional areas and their communities, who in the absence of garnering commensurate economic returns from tourism expansion find themselves in social and ecological deficit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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22. Harnessing empathy in hospitality and tourism: Are conversations the answer?
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Zamanillo Tamborrel, Lourdes L. and Cheer, Joseph M.
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SOCIAL tourism ,HOSPITALITY industry ,TOURISM economics ,SUSTAINABLE development ,TOURIST attractions - Abstract
Given tourism's economic importance, its potential to create positive social change is often promoted, including the possibility for it to become a force for cross-cultural understanding through empathy. Because of its capacity to open new forms of intersubjective understanding, it is believed that empathy can harness more ethical relations between hosts and guests. Allied to these ideals is the following question: to what extent do tourists in less developed contexts actively engage with hosts (or the Other) through empathy? By using a case study of a ten-day pro-social cycling tour in Cambodia, this study examined the conditions that governed and shaped empathy between hosts and guests. Findings suggest that the key condition that harnesses empathy in host–guest relationships materializes when there is an opportunity to engage in bilateral conversations in situations where power differences are reduced. However, the role of empathy as a 'necessary' element for cross-cultural understanding remains open to contestation and remains ripe for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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23. Geographies of marginalization: encountering modern slavery in tourism.
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Cheer, Joseph M.
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SLAVERY , *GEOTOURISM , *TOURISM economics , *COMMUNITY tourism , *SEX tourism - Abstract
The article discusses the prevalence of modern slavery practices in tourism. Topics discussed include the aspects of critical tourism geographies research according to authors R. V. Bianchi and S. Britton, the geographies of marginalization in host communities, and the contemporary problems associated with tourism including gender equality, sex tourism and social justice concerns.
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- 2018
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24. Tourism in Pacific island countries: A status quo round‐up.
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Cheer, Joseph M., Pratt, Stephen, Tolkach, Denis, Bailey, Anthony, Taumoepeau, Semisi, and Movono, Apisalome
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TOURISM , *ECONOMIC underdevelopment - Abstract
Abstract: In the 21st century, Pacific island countries (PICs) continue to leverage for tourism the attributes that have imbued them, including appeals to their cultural, geographical, and climatic allure. However, the question raised more frequently by many is why despite the many decades of tourism across the region, development impacts from the sector remain largely muted. The key remit of this paper is to offer a status quo round‐up of tourism in PICs and to draw on key emergent themes that underlay the present context. There is little doubt that for policymakers and their international development partners, whether tourism has or can lead to enduring development outcomes remains clouded in questions over whether there is ample evidence available to support such assertions. However, this has failed to dampen the enthusiasm of multilateral agencies that promote the notion that tourism's potential remains largely underdeveloped. With largely narrow economic bases, PICs have little choice but to seek further development of tourism despite the many fundamental constraints that make them less competitive than Southeast Asian destinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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25. TOURISM AND ISLANDSCAPES: Cultural realignment, social-ecological resilience and change.
- Author
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Cheer, Joseph M., Cole, Stroma, Reeves, Keir J., and Kumi Kato
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SUSTAINABLE tourism ,ECOLOGICAL resilience ,CULTURAL landscapes ,ISLANDS ,MANAGEMENT ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
If, as according to Robin (2015: online), “islands are idealised ecological worlds, the Edens of a fallen planet’”, the rationale underpinning tourism expansion should acknowledge MacLeod’s (2013) notion of “cultural realignment” that calls for optimal and resilient encounters. This introductory article to the subsequent theme section of the journal on sustainable tourism acts as a bridge toward the development of emergent themes that describe how island peoples adapt and respond in localised cultural islandscapes as a consequence of tourism expansion. The links between cultural alignment and social-ecological resilience are clear and the principal and overarching question posed in this introductory article is: To what extent are islandscapes resilient to rapidly changing utilities, significances and ways of life wrought by tourism expansion? The vulnerability-resilience duality remains firmly entrenched in the discourse on islands where tourism has become prominent, and although tourism provides some resiliency, overall, islandscapes remain subject to externally driven fast and slow change that exercises an overwhelming influence. Islander agency will likely remain subject to the fluctuations in the demands of the tourism supply chain. Therefore, tourism as a standalone focus of islands is a high-risk proposition, especially in contexts where externally driven change is likely to intensify. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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26. Colonial heritage and tourism: ethnic landscape perspectives.
- Author
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Cheer, Joseph M. and Reeves, Keir J.
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CULTURAL property ,ETHNIC tourism ,LANDSCAPES ,CULTURE & tourism ,URBAN planning - Abstract
The revival of colonial heritage is a particular feature of former British and French colonies in Pacific and Asian settings. This is exemplified by the redevelopment and rejuvenation of what were exclusive ‘comfort zones’ for the ‘colonial classes’ and is central to the consumption of colonial nostalgia via tourism. The political and semiotic implications of renewing colonial era constructions for tourism are manifold. The key argument is that this can re-politicise what was hitherto benign colonial heritages. Furthermore, this can aggravate tensions within what are already fragile ethnic landscapes. This is especially so when the setting is one where the various publics have been steeped in economic, cultural and sociopolitical changes, and where political and civil upheavals are recent occurrences. If the restoration of colonial heritage for tourism (in this case for heritage hotels) in former colonies is conducted oblivious to the legacies and meanings instilled in such heritages, the exacerbation of social and political sensitivities is likely. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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27. Kicking goals or offside: is tourism development in the Pacific helping progress towards the MDGs?
- Author
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Cheer, Joseph M.
- Abstract
The article discusses how tourism can act as an agent for development and poverty alleviation in Pacific island countries and its impact on the pursuit of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Tourism sector data were taken from Fiji, Samoa and Vanuatu. It notes the negligible impact of tourism on poverty and suggests that policymakers and researchers need to establish empirical evidence to confirm whether tourism is a pro-poor vehicle and focus on the integration of pro-poor considerations into sector planning and development.
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- 2010
28. Determining Peak Altitude on Maps, Books and Cartographic Materials: Multidisciplinary Implications.
- Author
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Maciuk, Kamil, Apollo, Michal, Cheer, Joseph M., Konečný, Ondřej, Kozioł, Krystian, Kudrys, Jacek, Mostowska, Joanna, Róg, Marta, Skorupa, Bogdan, Szombara, Stanisław, Vettore, Antonio, Masiero, Andrea, and El-Sheimy, Naser
- Subjects
CARTOGRAPHIC materials ,ALTITUDES ,GLOBAL Positioning System ,OPTICAL radar ,LIDAR - Abstract
Mountain peaks and their altitude have been of interest to researchers across disciplines. Measurement methods and techniques have changed and developed over the years, leading to more accurate measurements and, consequently, more accurate determination of peak altitudes. This research transpired due to the frequency of misstatements found in existing sources including books, maps, guidebooks and the Internet. Such inaccuracies have the potential to create controversy, especially among peak-baggers in pursuit of climbing the highest summits. The Polish Sudetes Mountains were selected for this study; 24 summits in the 14 mesoregions were measured. Measurements were obtained employing the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) and light detection and ranging (LiDAR), both modern and highly precise techniques. Moreover, to determine the accuracy of measurements, several of the summits were measured using a mobile phone as an additional method. We compare GNSS vs. LiDAR and verify the level of confidence of peak heights obtained by automatic methods from LiDAR data alone. The GNSS receiver results showed a discrepancy of approximately 10 m compared with other information sources examined. Findings indicate that the heights of peaks presented in cartographic materials are inaccurate, especially in lesser-known mountain ranges. Furthermore, among all the mountain ranges examined, the results demonstrated that five of the summits were no longer classed as the highest, potentially impacting tourist perceptions and subsequent visitation. Overall, due to the topographical relief characteristics and varying vegetation cover of mountains, we argue that the re-measuring procedure should comprise two steps: (1) develop high-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) based on LiDAR; (2) assumed heights should be measured using precise GNSS receivers. Unfortunately, due to the time constraints and the prohibitive costs of GNSS, LiDAR continues to be the most common source of new altitude data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. Demarketing Tourism for Sustainability: Degrowing Tourism or Moving the Deckchairs on the Titanic?
- Author
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Hall, C. Michael, Wood, Kimberley J., Cheer, Joseph M., Graci, Sonya, and Dolezal, Claudia
- Abstract
Demarketing is generally recognized as that aspect of marketing that aims at discouraging customers in general or a certain class of customers in particular on either a temporary or permanent basis and has been increasingly posited as a potential tool to degrow tourism and improve its overall sustainability, particularly as a result of so-called overtourism. The paper provides an overview of the various ways in which demarketing has been applied in a tourism context and assesses the relative value of demarketing as a means of contributing to sustainability and degrowing tourism. It is argued that demarketing can make a substantial contribution to degrowing tourism at a local or even regional scale, but that the capacity to shift visitation in space and time also highlights a core weakness with respect to its contribution at other scales. The paper concludes by noting that the concept of degrowth also needs to be best understood as a continuum of which demarketing is only one aspect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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30. Spiritual tourism: Entrée to the Special Issue.
- Author
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Cheer, Joseph M., Belhassen, Yaniv, and Kujawa, Joanna
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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