The Routledge Handbook of Tourism and Indigenous Peoples
Herausgeber: Butler, Richard; Carr, Anna
The Routledge Handbook of Tourism and Indigenous Peoples
Herausgeber: Butler, Richard; Carr, Anna
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The Routledge Handbook of Tourism and Indigenous Peoples presents an up-to-date, critical and comprehensive overview of established and emerging themes around Indigeneity and connections between Indigenous peoples and tourism development.
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The Routledge Handbook of Tourism and Indigenous Peoples presents an up-to-date, critical and comprehensive overview of established and emerging themes around Indigeneity and connections between Indigenous peoples and tourism development.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 468
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 984g
- ISBN-13: 9781032136547
- ISBN-10: 1032136545
- Artikelnr.: 70148856
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 468
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. August 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 984g
- ISBN-13: 9781032136547
- ISBN-10: 1032136545
- Artikelnr.: 70148856
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Richard Butler is Emeritus Professor of Tourism at Strathclyde University, Glasgow, Scotland. He has taught at the University of Western Ontario in London, Canada, at the universities of Surrey and Strathclyde in the UK and held visiting professorships in Australia, Austria, Italy, Hong Kong and the Netherlands. Anna Carr (Ng¿puhi, Ngati Ruanui, Ng¿ruahine) is an Associate Professor, co-director of the Centre for Recreation Research and Head of Department at the Department of Tourism, University of Otago, New Zealand.
1. Introduction: Revisiting Tourism and Indigenous People. Section 1.
Indigeneity. 2. "Are We Not All Indigenous?" Negotiating Indigenity in
Greenlandic Tourism. 3. The Constant Creation of Aboriginality: A
Commentary on Indigenous Being and Becoming. 4. A Critical Realist
Appraisal of Indigeneity: The Case of Miao Peoples in a Tourism Village in
China. 5. Power, Policies, and Cultural Sensitivity in Ainu Tourism:
Indigenous Involvement in and Control over Tourism Developments in
Hokkaido, Japan. Section 2. Indigenous. 6. Decolonising Indigenous Tourism:
Reconciliation, Truth-Telling, Whiteness and "Welcome to Country" in
Australia. 7. Learn, Teach, Heal: Indigenous Tourism as a Site for
Reclaiming and Becoming. 8. "Come and Know a Little About Your Own
Backyard": Transformative Learning Potentials Through Knowledge Sharing in
Indigenous Tourism in Australia. 9. Tourism, Truth-telling and Sovereignty:
A Gitxaäa Perspective. 10. You Can't Ask That! Projective Techniques
Unearth Socio-cultural Aversions Towards Indigenous Tourism. 11. An
Indigenous Community Code of Conduct for Tourist Behaviours: Voices from
the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. 12. Confronting Marginalisation? Gender
Dynamics and Batwa Engagement with Tourism in Uganda. Section 3. Indigenous
Alternatives. 13. Doing it the 'Pacific Way': Indigenous Education and
Training in the Pacific Islands. 14. Stewarding M¿ori Taonga for
Sustainable Indigenous Tourism Enterprise. 15. Indigenizing Tourism by
Indigenizing the Landscape: A Digital Marketing Case Study of Wagiman
Ethnobiology for Tourism and Conservation. 16. Conversations about Culture:
The Need to Integrate Indigenous Voices into the Development of Sustainable
Cultural Heritage Tourism Opportunities in the Pacific. 17. Tourism
Enterprises in the South Pacific: Culturally Centered Adaptation in the
Face of Covid-19. Section 4. Indigenous Knowledge and Rights. 18. The
Integration of Indigenous Knowledge in Canadian Protected Areas to Foster
Conservation, Reconciliation and Tourism Development. 19. Tourism
Appropriation: 'Taking' Land and Culture in Sámi Areas. 20. An Evaluation
of the New Ainu Law: Tourism Promotion Policy and Indigenous Rights of the
Ainu People in Japan. 21. Indigenous Hosts and Food Security: A Case Study
from Simien Mountains National Park. 22. Indigenous Knowledge as an
Important Contribution to the Sustainability of Geotourism and Geoparks. 23
Reflexivity on the Establishment of National Parks in the Light of the
Chapter by Mason et al. Section 5. Indigenous Tourism Innovations and
Developments. 24. Social Innovation in an Indigenous Tourism Development.
26. Pathways To Culturally Sensitive Tourism Policies and Practices. 25.
The Upper Navua Conservation Area: Reflections on Ecotourism and Community.
27. Indigenous Handicrafts Based Domestic Tourism in Bangladesh. 28.
Indigenous Tourism in Iran. 29. Contemporary Arts and Indigenous Arts-Based
Tourism in West Africa. 30. Don't Worry. We Have Your Best Interests at
Heart. Section 6. Indigenous Involvement in Planning Development. 31.
Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada (ITAC). 32. Indigenous Tourism
International Framework, Rights, and Empowerment of Grassroots
Organizations: Latin America and the Chilean Case. 33. Development of the
Inaugural Queensland First Nations Tourism Action Plan 2020-2025 and the
Queensland First Nations Tourism Council. 34. Reflection on Aboriginal
Tourism in Western Australia: A Balancing Act of Opportunity and Challenge.
35. Conclusions. Appendix.
Indigeneity. 2. "Are We Not All Indigenous?" Negotiating Indigenity in
Greenlandic Tourism. 3. The Constant Creation of Aboriginality: A
Commentary on Indigenous Being and Becoming. 4. A Critical Realist
Appraisal of Indigeneity: The Case of Miao Peoples in a Tourism Village in
China. 5. Power, Policies, and Cultural Sensitivity in Ainu Tourism:
Indigenous Involvement in and Control over Tourism Developments in
Hokkaido, Japan. Section 2. Indigenous. 6. Decolonising Indigenous Tourism:
Reconciliation, Truth-Telling, Whiteness and "Welcome to Country" in
Australia. 7. Learn, Teach, Heal: Indigenous Tourism as a Site for
Reclaiming and Becoming. 8. "Come and Know a Little About Your Own
Backyard": Transformative Learning Potentials Through Knowledge Sharing in
Indigenous Tourism in Australia. 9. Tourism, Truth-telling and Sovereignty:
A Gitxaäa Perspective. 10. You Can't Ask That! Projective Techniques
Unearth Socio-cultural Aversions Towards Indigenous Tourism. 11. An
Indigenous Community Code of Conduct for Tourist Behaviours: Voices from
the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. 12. Confronting Marginalisation? Gender
Dynamics and Batwa Engagement with Tourism in Uganda. Section 3. Indigenous
Alternatives. 13. Doing it the 'Pacific Way': Indigenous Education and
Training in the Pacific Islands. 14. Stewarding M¿ori Taonga for
Sustainable Indigenous Tourism Enterprise. 15. Indigenizing Tourism by
Indigenizing the Landscape: A Digital Marketing Case Study of Wagiman
Ethnobiology for Tourism and Conservation. 16. Conversations about Culture:
The Need to Integrate Indigenous Voices into the Development of Sustainable
Cultural Heritage Tourism Opportunities in the Pacific. 17. Tourism
Enterprises in the South Pacific: Culturally Centered Adaptation in the
Face of Covid-19. Section 4. Indigenous Knowledge and Rights. 18. The
Integration of Indigenous Knowledge in Canadian Protected Areas to Foster
Conservation, Reconciliation and Tourism Development. 19. Tourism
Appropriation: 'Taking' Land and Culture in Sámi Areas. 20. An Evaluation
of the New Ainu Law: Tourism Promotion Policy and Indigenous Rights of the
Ainu People in Japan. 21. Indigenous Hosts and Food Security: A Case Study
from Simien Mountains National Park. 22. Indigenous Knowledge as an
Important Contribution to the Sustainability of Geotourism and Geoparks. 23
Reflexivity on the Establishment of National Parks in the Light of the
Chapter by Mason et al. Section 5. Indigenous Tourism Innovations and
Developments. 24. Social Innovation in an Indigenous Tourism Development.
26. Pathways To Culturally Sensitive Tourism Policies and Practices. 25.
The Upper Navua Conservation Area: Reflections on Ecotourism and Community.
27. Indigenous Handicrafts Based Domestic Tourism in Bangladesh. 28.
Indigenous Tourism in Iran. 29. Contemporary Arts and Indigenous Arts-Based
Tourism in West Africa. 30. Don't Worry. We Have Your Best Interests at
Heart. Section 6. Indigenous Involvement in Planning Development. 31.
Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada (ITAC). 32. Indigenous Tourism
International Framework, Rights, and Empowerment of Grassroots
Organizations: Latin America and the Chilean Case. 33. Development of the
Inaugural Queensland First Nations Tourism Action Plan 2020-2025 and the
Queensland First Nations Tourism Council. 34. Reflection on Aboriginal
Tourism in Western Australia: A Balancing Act of Opportunity and Challenge.
35. Conclusions. Appendix.
1. Introduction: Revisiting Tourism and Indigenous People. Section 1.
Indigeneity. 2. "Are We Not All Indigenous?" Negotiating Indigenity in
Greenlandic Tourism. 3. The Constant Creation of Aboriginality: A
Commentary on Indigenous Being and Becoming. 4. A Critical Realist
Appraisal of Indigeneity: The Case of Miao Peoples in a Tourism Village in
China. 5. Power, Policies, and Cultural Sensitivity in Ainu Tourism:
Indigenous Involvement in and Control over Tourism Developments in
Hokkaido, Japan. Section 2. Indigenous. 6. Decolonising Indigenous Tourism:
Reconciliation, Truth-Telling, Whiteness and "Welcome to Country" in
Australia. 7. Learn, Teach, Heal: Indigenous Tourism as a Site for
Reclaiming and Becoming. 8. "Come and Know a Little About Your Own
Backyard": Transformative Learning Potentials Through Knowledge Sharing in
Indigenous Tourism in Australia. 9. Tourism, Truth-telling and Sovereignty:
A Gitxaäa Perspective. 10. You Can't Ask That! Projective Techniques
Unearth Socio-cultural Aversions Towards Indigenous Tourism. 11. An
Indigenous Community Code of Conduct for Tourist Behaviours: Voices from
the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. 12. Confronting Marginalisation? Gender
Dynamics and Batwa Engagement with Tourism in Uganda. Section 3. Indigenous
Alternatives. 13. Doing it the 'Pacific Way': Indigenous Education and
Training in the Pacific Islands. 14. Stewarding M¿ori Taonga for
Sustainable Indigenous Tourism Enterprise. 15. Indigenizing Tourism by
Indigenizing the Landscape: A Digital Marketing Case Study of Wagiman
Ethnobiology for Tourism and Conservation. 16. Conversations about Culture:
The Need to Integrate Indigenous Voices into the Development of Sustainable
Cultural Heritage Tourism Opportunities in the Pacific. 17. Tourism
Enterprises in the South Pacific: Culturally Centered Adaptation in the
Face of Covid-19. Section 4. Indigenous Knowledge and Rights. 18. The
Integration of Indigenous Knowledge in Canadian Protected Areas to Foster
Conservation, Reconciliation and Tourism Development. 19. Tourism
Appropriation: 'Taking' Land and Culture in Sámi Areas. 20. An Evaluation
of the New Ainu Law: Tourism Promotion Policy and Indigenous Rights of the
Ainu People in Japan. 21. Indigenous Hosts and Food Security: A Case Study
from Simien Mountains National Park. 22. Indigenous Knowledge as an
Important Contribution to the Sustainability of Geotourism and Geoparks. 23
Reflexivity on the Establishment of National Parks in the Light of the
Chapter by Mason et al. Section 5. Indigenous Tourism Innovations and
Developments. 24. Social Innovation in an Indigenous Tourism Development.
26. Pathways To Culturally Sensitive Tourism Policies and Practices. 25.
The Upper Navua Conservation Area: Reflections on Ecotourism and Community.
27. Indigenous Handicrafts Based Domestic Tourism in Bangladesh. 28.
Indigenous Tourism in Iran. 29. Contemporary Arts and Indigenous Arts-Based
Tourism in West Africa. 30. Don't Worry. We Have Your Best Interests at
Heart. Section 6. Indigenous Involvement in Planning Development. 31.
Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada (ITAC). 32. Indigenous Tourism
International Framework, Rights, and Empowerment of Grassroots
Organizations: Latin America and the Chilean Case. 33. Development of the
Inaugural Queensland First Nations Tourism Action Plan 2020-2025 and the
Queensland First Nations Tourism Council. 34. Reflection on Aboriginal
Tourism in Western Australia: A Balancing Act of Opportunity and Challenge.
35. Conclusions. Appendix.
Indigeneity. 2. "Are We Not All Indigenous?" Negotiating Indigenity in
Greenlandic Tourism. 3. The Constant Creation of Aboriginality: A
Commentary on Indigenous Being and Becoming. 4. A Critical Realist
Appraisal of Indigeneity: The Case of Miao Peoples in a Tourism Village in
China. 5. Power, Policies, and Cultural Sensitivity in Ainu Tourism:
Indigenous Involvement in and Control over Tourism Developments in
Hokkaido, Japan. Section 2. Indigenous. 6. Decolonising Indigenous Tourism:
Reconciliation, Truth-Telling, Whiteness and "Welcome to Country" in
Australia. 7. Learn, Teach, Heal: Indigenous Tourism as a Site for
Reclaiming and Becoming. 8. "Come and Know a Little About Your Own
Backyard": Transformative Learning Potentials Through Knowledge Sharing in
Indigenous Tourism in Australia. 9. Tourism, Truth-telling and Sovereignty:
A Gitxaäa Perspective. 10. You Can't Ask That! Projective Techniques
Unearth Socio-cultural Aversions Towards Indigenous Tourism. 11. An
Indigenous Community Code of Conduct for Tourist Behaviours: Voices from
the Tibet Autonomous Region, China. 12. Confronting Marginalisation? Gender
Dynamics and Batwa Engagement with Tourism in Uganda. Section 3. Indigenous
Alternatives. 13. Doing it the 'Pacific Way': Indigenous Education and
Training in the Pacific Islands. 14. Stewarding M¿ori Taonga for
Sustainable Indigenous Tourism Enterprise. 15. Indigenizing Tourism by
Indigenizing the Landscape: A Digital Marketing Case Study of Wagiman
Ethnobiology for Tourism and Conservation. 16. Conversations about Culture:
The Need to Integrate Indigenous Voices into the Development of Sustainable
Cultural Heritage Tourism Opportunities in the Pacific. 17. Tourism
Enterprises in the South Pacific: Culturally Centered Adaptation in the
Face of Covid-19. Section 4. Indigenous Knowledge and Rights. 18. The
Integration of Indigenous Knowledge in Canadian Protected Areas to Foster
Conservation, Reconciliation and Tourism Development. 19. Tourism
Appropriation: 'Taking' Land and Culture in Sámi Areas. 20. An Evaluation
of the New Ainu Law: Tourism Promotion Policy and Indigenous Rights of the
Ainu People in Japan. 21. Indigenous Hosts and Food Security: A Case Study
from Simien Mountains National Park. 22. Indigenous Knowledge as an
Important Contribution to the Sustainability of Geotourism and Geoparks. 23
Reflexivity on the Establishment of National Parks in the Light of the
Chapter by Mason et al. Section 5. Indigenous Tourism Innovations and
Developments. 24. Social Innovation in an Indigenous Tourism Development.
26. Pathways To Culturally Sensitive Tourism Policies and Practices. 25.
The Upper Navua Conservation Area: Reflections on Ecotourism and Community.
27. Indigenous Handicrafts Based Domestic Tourism in Bangladesh. 28.
Indigenous Tourism in Iran. 29. Contemporary Arts and Indigenous Arts-Based
Tourism in West Africa. 30. Don't Worry. We Have Your Best Interests at
Heart. Section 6. Indigenous Involvement in Planning Development. 31.
Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada (ITAC). 32. Indigenous Tourism
International Framework, Rights, and Empowerment of Grassroots
Organizations: Latin America and the Chilean Case. 33. Development of the
Inaugural Queensland First Nations Tourism Action Plan 2020-2025 and the
Queensland First Nations Tourism Council. 34. Reflection on Aboriginal
Tourism in Western Australia: A Balancing Act of Opportunity and Challenge.
35. Conclusions. Appendix.