Global Tourism and COVID-19 (eBook, ePUB)
Implications for Theory and Practice
Redaktion: Lew, Alan A.; Mostafanezhad, Mary; Brouder, Patrick; Cheer, Joseph M.
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Global Tourism and COVID-19 (eBook, ePUB)
Implications for Theory and Practice
Redaktion: Lew, Alan A.; Mostafanezhad, Mary; Brouder, Patrick; Cheer, Joseph M.
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This comprehensive book focuses on how the COVID-19 pandemic is transforming travel and tourism, globally.
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This comprehensive book focuses on how the COVID-19 pandemic is transforming travel and tourism, globally.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. November 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000506761
- Artikelnr.: 62730151
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. November 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000506761
- Artikelnr.: 62730151
Alan A. Lew is Professor Emeritus at Northern Arizona University and is the founding Editor-in-Chief of the journal Tourism Geographies. His background encompasses human geography, urban planning, and tourism studies. His recent interests and writings have focused on place making, resilience, and consciousness studies as they relate to travel and tourism. Joseph M. Cheer is Professor, Center for Tourism Research, Wakayama University, Japan; and Visiting Professor, AUT, New Zealand and UCSI Malaysia. He is Co Editor-in-Chief of Tourism Geographies. Recent books include Masculinities in the Field: Tourism and Transdisciplinary Research (2021) and Travel and Tourism in the Age of Overtourism (2021). He is an Australian Research Council Linkage Project (ARC LP) grant recipient with colleagues at University of Melbourne. Mary Mostafanezhad is Associate Professor, Department of Geography and Environment, University of Hawai'i at M¿noa. She is the co-editor-in-chief of Tourism Geographies and the co-founder of the Critical Tourism Studies Asia-Pacific Network. Her scholarship is broadly focused on tourism, development, and socio-environmental change. Patrick Brouder holds the British Columbia Regional Innovation Chair in Tourism and Sustainable Rural Development at Vancouver Island University, Canada. He works closely with stakeholders across western Canada on Indigenous tourism, creative economies, and long-term regional evolution. He is an editor of Tourism Geographies and co-managing editor of Tourism Geographic.
Introduction: Visions of travel and tourism after the global COVID-19
transformation of 2020 1. Transforming the (tourism) world for good and
(re)generating the potential 'new normal' 2. "We can't return to normal":
committing to tourism equity in the post-pandemic age 3. Reset redux:
possible evolutionary pathways towards the transformation of tourism in a
COVID-19 world 4. COVID-19, indigenous peoples and tourism: a view from New
Zealand 5. Regenerative tourism needs diverse economic practices 6. Human
flourishing, tourism transformation and COVID-19: a conceptual touchstone
7. Cancelling March Madness exposes opportunities for a more sustainable
sports tourism economy 8. Ecological grief generates desire for
environmental healing in tourism after COVID-19 9. How should tourism
education values be transformed after 2020? 10. Post COVID-19 ecological
and social reset: moving away from capitalist growth models towards tourism
as Buen Vivir 11. COVID-19 is expanding global consciousness and the
sustainability of travel and tourism 12. Pandemics, transformations and
tourism: be careful what you wish for 13. A post COVID-19 future - tourism
re-imagined and re-enabled 14. Socialising tourism for social and
ecological justice after COVID-19 15. The COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity
for escaping the unsustainable global tourism path 16. Reconnecting tourism
after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas 17. Covid-19 is an
unnatural disaster: Hope in revelatory moments of crisis 18. Adventure
travel and tourism after COVID-19 - business as usual or opportunity to
reset? 19. COVID-19: from temporary de-globalisation to a re-discovery of
tourism? 20. Critical tourism scholars: brokers of hope 21. Lessons from
COVID-19 can prepare global tourism for the economic transformation needed
to combat climate change 22. Reconsidering global mobility - distancing
from mass cruise tourism in the aftermath of COVID-19 23. The COVID-19
crisis: Opportunities for sustainable and proximity tourism 24. The
transformational festival as a subversive toolbox for a transformed
tourism: lessons from Burning Man for a COVID-19 world 25. A mindful shift:
an opportunity for mindfulness-driven tourism in a postpandemic world 26.
The novel spaces and power-geometries in tourism and hospitality after 2020
will belong to the 'local' 27. COVID-19 leads to a new context for the
"right to tourism": a reset of tourists' perspectives on space
appropriation is needed 28. From high-touch to high-tech: COVID-19 drives
robotics adoption Conclusions: Reflections and discussions: tourism matters
in the new normal post COVID-19
transformation of 2020 1. Transforming the (tourism) world for good and
(re)generating the potential 'new normal' 2. "We can't return to normal":
committing to tourism equity in the post-pandemic age 3. Reset redux:
possible evolutionary pathways towards the transformation of tourism in a
COVID-19 world 4. COVID-19, indigenous peoples and tourism: a view from New
Zealand 5. Regenerative tourism needs diverse economic practices 6. Human
flourishing, tourism transformation and COVID-19: a conceptual touchstone
7. Cancelling March Madness exposes opportunities for a more sustainable
sports tourism economy 8. Ecological grief generates desire for
environmental healing in tourism after COVID-19 9. How should tourism
education values be transformed after 2020? 10. Post COVID-19 ecological
and social reset: moving away from capitalist growth models towards tourism
as Buen Vivir 11. COVID-19 is expanding global consciousness and the
sustainability of travel and tourism 12. Pandemics, transformations and
tourism: be careful what you wish for 13. A post COVID-19 future - tourism
re-imagined and re-enabled 14. Socialising tourism for social and
ecological justice after COVID-19 15. The COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity
for escaping the unsustainable global tourism path 16. Reconnecting tourism
after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas 17. Covid-19 is an
unnatural disaster: Hope in revelatory moments of crisis 18. Adventure
travel and tourism after COVID-19 - business as usual or opportunity to
reset? 19. COVID-19: from temporary de-globalisation to a re-discovery of
tourism? 20. Critical tourism scholars: brokers of hope 21. Lessons from
COVID-19 can prepare global tourism for the economic transformation needed
to combat climate change 22. Reconsidering global mobility - distancing
from mass cruise tourism in the aftermath of COVID-19 23. The COVID-19
crisis: Opportunities for sustainable and proximity tourism 24. The
transformational festival as a subversive toolbox for a transformed
tourism: lessons from Burning Man for a COVID-19 world 25. A mindful shift:
an opportunity for mindfulness-driven tourism in a postpandemic world 26.
The novel spaces and power-geometries in tourism and hospitality after 2020
will belong to the 'local' 27. COVID-19 leads to a new context for the
"right to tourism": a reset of tourists' perspectives on space
appropriation is needed 28. From high-touch to high-tech: COVID-19 drives
robotics adoption Conclusions: Reflections and discussions: tourism matters
in the new normal post COVID-19
Introduction: Visions of travel and tourism after the global COVID-19
transformation of 2020 1. Transforming the (tourism) world for good and
(re)generating the potential 'new normal' 2. "We can't return to normal":
committing to tourism equity in the post-pandemic age 3. Reset redux:
possible evolutionary pathways towards the transformation of tourism in a
COVID-19 world 4. COVID-19, indigenous peoples and tourism: a view from New
Zealand 5. Regenerative tourism needs diverse economic practices 6. Human
flourishing, tourism transformation and COVID-19: a conceptual touchstone
7. Cancelling March Madness exposes opportunities for a more sustainable
sports tourism economy 8. Ecological grief generates desire for
environmental healing in tourism after COVID-19 9. How should tourism
education values be transformed after 2020? 10. Post COVID-19 ecological
and social reset: moving away from capitalist growth models towards tourism
as Buen Vivir 11. COVID-19 is expanding global consciousness and the
sustainability of travel and tourism 12. Pandemics, transformations and
tourism: be careful what you wish for 13. A post COVID-19 future - tourism
re-imagined and re-enabled 14. Socialising tourism for social and
ecological justice after COVID-19 15. The COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity
for escaping the unsustainable global tourism path 16. Reconnecting tourism
after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas 17. Covid-19 is an
unnatural disaster: Hope in revelatory moments of crisis 18. Adventure
travel and tourism after COVID-19 - business as usual or opportunity to
reset? 19. COVID-19: from temporary de-globalisation to a re-discovery of
tourism? 20. Critical tourism scholars: brokers of hope 21. Lessons from
COVID-19 can prepare global tourism for the economic transformation needed
to combat climate change 22. Reconsidering global mobility - distancing
from mass cruise tourism in the aftermath of COVID-19 23. The COVID-19
crisis: Opportunities for sustainable and proximity tourism 24. The
transformational festival as a subversive toolbox for a transformed
tourism: lessons from Burning Man for a COVID-19 world 25. A mindful shift:
an opportunity for mindfulness-driven tourism in a postpandemic world 26.
The novel spaces and power-geometries in tourism and hospitality after 2020
will belong to the 'local' 27. COVID-19 leads to a new context for the
"right to tourism": a reset of tourists' perspectives on space
appropriation is needed 28. From high-touch to high-tech: COVID-19 drives
robotics adoption Conclusions: Reflections and discussions: tourism matters
in the new normal post COVID-19
transformation of 2020 1. Transforming the (tourism) world for good and
(re)generating the potential 'new normal' 2. "We can't return to normal":
committing to tourism equity in the post-pandemic age 3. Reset redux:
possible evolutionary pathways towards the transformation of tourism in a
COVID-19 world 4. COVID-19, indigenous peoples and tourism: a view from New
Zealand 5. Regenerative tourism needs diverse economic practices 6. Human
flourishing, tourism transformation and COVID-19: a conceptual touchstone
7. Cancelling March Madness exposes opportunities for a more sustainable
sports tourism economy 8. Ecological grief generates desire for
environmental healing in tourism after COVID-19 9. How should tourism
education values be transformed after 2020? 10. Post COVID-19 ecological
and social reset: moving away from capitalist growth models towards tourism
as Buen Vivir 11. COVID-19 is expanding global consciousness and the
sustainability of travel and tourism 12. Pandemics, transformations and
tourism: be careful what you wish for 13. A post COVID-19 future - tourism
re-imagined and re-enabled 14. Socialising tourism for social and
ecological justice after COVID-19 15. The COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity
for escaping the unsustainable global tourism path 16. Reconnecting tourism
after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas 17. Covid-19 is an
unnatural disaster: Hope in revelatory moments of crisis 18. Adventure
travel and tourism after COVID-19 - business as usual or opportunity to
reset? 19. COVID-19: from temporary de-globalisation to a re-discovery of
tourism? 20. Critical tourism scholars: brokers of hope 21. Lessons from
COVID-19 can prepare global tourism for the economic transformation needed
to combat climate change 22. Reconsidering global mobility - distancing
from mass cruise tourism in the aftermath of COVID-19 23. The COVID-19
crisis: Opportunities for sustainable and proximity tourism 24. The
transformational festival as a subversive toolbox for a transformed
tourism: lessons from Burning Man for a COVID-19 world 25. A mindful shift:
an opportunity for mindfulness-driven tourism in a postpandemic world 26.
The novel spaces and power-geometries in tourism and hospitality after 2020
will belong to the 'local' 27. COVID-19 leads to a new context for the
"right to tourism": a reset of tourists' perspectives on space
appropriation is needed 28. From high-touch to high-tech: COVID-19 drives
robotics adoption Conclusions: Reflections and discussions: tourism matters
in the new normal post COVID-19