This is a critical introduction to the relations between tourism, tourists, and tourism spaces. It fuses economic and cultural perspectives to explain how tourism is dependent on place and space, while at the same time as defining those places and spaces.
Examining different levels of scale – from local to global – Tourism and Tourism Spaces is informed by the discussion of three key processes:
– production and consumption of tourist spaces
– consumption and commodification of tourist experiences
– construction and reconstruction of tourist spaces
Each chapter engages with different theoretical perspectives; is illustrated with comparative examples and case studies; uses tables, boxes and figures throughout; and concludes with a summary.
An integrated and systematic review of a range of theoretical positions – that integrates economic and cultural – Tourism and Tourism Spaces will be a key resource for students of geography, sociology, management studies, hospitality studies, and leisure studies.
Tabella dei contenuti
Introduction
PART ONE: PRODUCTION, REGULATION AND COMPETITION
Production and Regulation
Tourism Firms and the Organization of Production
Inter-company Cooperation and Competition
PART TWO: CONSUMPTION, EXPERIENCE AND COMMODIFICATION
Mapping Tourism Consumption
From Fordism to Mc Donaldization
Engineering the Tourist Experience
Tourism and the Commodification of Local Communities
Impacts and Relationships
PART THREE: CONSTRUCTING AND RECONSTRUCTING TOURISM PLACES AND SPACES
Tourism Places, Spaces and Change
Established Tourism Spaces in Transition
Changes in Coastal Resorts
Landscapes of Pleasure
The Construction of New Tourism Spaces and Places
Conclusions
Circa l’autore
Allan studied Economics and Geography at University College Swansea, 1969-72, before completing his Ph D at the LSE. After completing his doctoral thesis, he worked as a Research Fellow at the LSE on a project on′Change in Urban Britain′, and in 1976-8 was Lecturer in Geography at the University of Durham. In 1978 he moved to the Geography Department at the University of Exeter, where he was successively Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Reader and then, from 1995, Professor of Human Geography and European Studies. He was Co-Director of the Centre for European Studies 1987-95. He also jointly established, with Gareth Shaw, an MSc in Tourism, Development and Policy at Exeter in 2000. He was appointed to the Chair in European Integration and Globalization at London Metropolitan in 2006, in the Institute for the Study of European Transformations, and the Working Lives Research Institute. He joined the Tourism Group in the Faculty of Management at Surrey in January 2011.