Climate change: tourism destination dynamics

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Author(s)
Buckley, R
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2008
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The increasing attention given to the tourism sector within international negotiations on climate change is documented by Hall (2008); and the industry’s potential role in mitigation is explored by Becken in her probe on Climate Change. Here, therefore, I shall outline the ways in which tourist destinations of various types are likely to be affected by climate change, the ways in which they may respond, and the research they will need to inform those responses. In particular, Table 3 of Hall’s probe lists much of the relevant literature currently available, and Table 6 in that review compares the relative frequencies with ...
View more >The increasing attention given to the tourism sector within international negotiations on climate change is documented by Hall (2008); and the industry’s potential role in mitigation is explored by Becken in her probe on Climate Change. Here, therefore, I shall outline the ways in which tourist destinations of various types are likely to be affected by climate change, the ways in which they may respond, and the research they will need to inform those responses. In particular, Table 3 of Hall’s probe lists much of the relevant literature currently available, and Table 6 in that review compares the relative frequencies with which more detailed subtopics have been referred to. Further information is available in Hall and Higham (2005); Becken and Hay (2007). As noted by Becken (2008) in her response, however, this does not in itself provide a framework for further analysis; nor does that commentary itself adopt such an aim. Here, therefore, I attempt to provide such a framework, make some predictions, and identify research priorities.
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View more >The increasing attention given to the tourism sector within international negotiations on climate change is documented by Hall (2008); and the industry’s potential role in mitigation is explored by Becken in her probe on Climate Change. Here, therefore, I shall outline the ways in which tourist destinations of various types are likely to be affected by climate change, the ways in which they may respond, and the research they will need to inform those responses. In particular, Table 3 of Hall’s probe lists much of the relevant literature currently available, and Table 6 in that review compares the relative frequencies with which more detailed subtopics have been referred to. Further information is available in Hall and Higham (2005); Becken and Hay (2007). As noted by Becken (2008) in her response, however, this does not in itself provide a framework for further analysis; nor does that commentary itself adopt such an aim. Here, therefore, I attempt to provide such a framework, make some predictions, and identify research priorities.
View less >
Journal Title
Tourism Recreation Research
Volume
33
Issue
3
Copyright Statement
© 2008 Tourism Recreation Research. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.
Subject
Tourism