This volume consists of specially invited chapters by leading researchers who have reviewed the original model in the light of their own and other conceptual and theoretical positions and models. The book is divided into five sections, the conceptual origins of the TALC, spatial relationships and the TALC, alternative conceptual approaches, renewing or retiring with the TALC, and predicting with the TALC. The book concludes with a review of the future potential of the model in the area of the destination development process.
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction by C. Michael Hall
Part 1: The Conceptual Context and Evolution of the TALC
1. The Ontological Foundation of the TALC – Charles S. Johnston
2. Legitimising the TALC as a Theory of Development and Change – K. Michael Haywood
Part 2: Spatial Relationships and the TALC
3. Enigma Variations? The TALC, Marketing Models and the Descendants of the Product Life Cycle – Tim Coles
4. TALC and the Spatial Implications of Competition – Andreas Papatheodorou
5. Space-Time Accessibility and the TALC: The Role of Geographies of Spatial Interaction and Mobility in Contributing to an Improved Understanding of Tourism – C. M. Hall
Part 3: Alternative Conceptual Approaches and the TALC
6. The Contribution of Entrepreneurship Theory to the TALC Model - Roslyn Russell
7. The TALC and Protected Natural Areas – Sabine Weisenegger
8. Time Path Analysis and TALC Stage Demarcation – Sven Lundtorp and Stephen Wanhill
9. The Implications of Lamarckian Theory for the TALC Model – Neil Ravenscroft and Ion Hadjihambi
10. Chaos Theory and its Application to the TALC Model - Roslyn Russell
Part 4: Renewing or Retiring with the TALC
11. The Anatomy of the Rejuvenation Stage of the TALC – Chris Cooper
12. Coastal Resort Restructuring and the TALC – Sheela Agarwal
13. Revisiting the TALC: Is There an Off-Ramp? - Tom G. Baum
Part 5: Predicting with the TALC
14. How to Define, Identify and Monitor the Decline of Tourist Destinations: Towards an Early Warning System - Mara Manente and Harald Pechlaner
15. The Predictive Potential of the TALC Model - Ted Berry
Part 6: The Future and the TALC
References
Over de auteur
Richard Butler is Emeritus Professor at the University of Strathclyde, UK and the University of Western Ontario, Canada. His research focuses on destination development, remote and insular areas, impacts of tourism, sustainability and overtourism.