No time for smokescreen skepticism: A rejoinder to Shani and Arad

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Author(s)
Hall, C Michael
Amelung, Bas
Cohen, Scott
Eijgelaar, Eke
Gossling, Stefan
Higham, James
Leemans, Rik
Peeters, Paul
Ram, Yael
Scott, Daniel
Aall, Carlo
Abegg, Bruno
Arana, Jorge E
Barr, Stewart
Becken, Susanne
Buckley, Ralf
Burns, Peter
Coles, Tim
Dawson, Jackie
Doran, Rouven
Dubois, Ghislain
Duval, David Timothy
Fennell, David
Gill, Alison M
Gren, Martin
Gronau, Werner
Guiver, Jo
Hopkins, Debbie
Huijbens, Edward H
Koens, Ko
Lamers, Machiel
Lemieux, Christopher
Lew, Alan
Long, Patrick
Melissen, Frans W
Nawijn, Jeroen
Nicholls, Sarah
Nilsson, Jan-Henrik
Nunkoo, Robin
Pomering, Alan
Reis, Arianne C
Reiser, Dirk
Richardson, Robert B
Rogerson, Christian M
Saarinen, Jarkko
Saeporsdottir, Anna Dora
Steiger, Robert
Upham, Paul
van der Linden, Sander
Visser, Gustav
Wall, Geoffrey
Weaver, David
Year published
2015
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Show full item recordAbstract
Shani and Arad (2014) claimed that tourism scholars tend to endorse the most pessimistic assessments regarding climate change, and that anthropogenic climate change was a “fashionable” and “highly controversial scientific topic”. This brief rejoinder provides the balance that is missing from such climate change denial and skepticism studies on climate change and tourism. Recent research provides substantial evidence that reports on anthropogenic climate change are accurate, and that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions, including from the tourism industry, play a significant role in climate change. Some positive net effects ...
View more >Shani and Arad (2014) claimed that tourism scholars tend to endorse the most pessimistic assessments regarding climate change, and that anthropogenic climate change was a “fashionable” and “highly controversial scientific topic”. This brief rejoinder provides the balance that is missing from such climate change denial and skepticism studies on climate change and tourism. Recent research provides substantial evidence that reports on anthropogenic climate change are accurate, and that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions, including from the tourism industry, play a significant role in climate change. Some positive net effects may be experienced by some destinations in the short-term, but in the long-term all elements of the tourism system will be impacted. The expansion of tourism emissions at a rate greater than efficiency gains means that it is increasingly urgent that the tourism sector acknowledge, accept and respond to climate change. Debate on tourism-related adaptation and mitigation measures is to be encouraged and welcomed. Climate change denial is not
View less >
View more >Shani and Arad (2014) claimed that tourism scholars tend to endorse the most pessimistic assessments regarding climate change, and that anthropogenic climate change was a “fashionable” and “highly controversial scientific topic”. This brief rejoinder provides the balance that is missing from such climate change denial and skepticism studies on climate change and tourism. Recent research provides substantial evidence that reports on anthropogenic climate change are accurate, and that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions, including from the tourism industry, play a significant role in climate change. Some positive net effects may be experienced by some destinations in the short-term, but in the long-term all elements of the tourism system will be impacted. The expansion of tourism emissions at a rate greater than efficiency gains means that it is increasingly urgent that the tourism sector acknowledge, accept and respond to climate change. Debate on tourism-related adaptation and mitigation measures is to be encouraged and welcomed. Climate change denial is not
View less >
Journal Title
Tourism Management
Volume
n/a
Copyright Statement
© 2014 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
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This publication has been entered into Griffith Research Online as an Advanced Online Version.
Subject
Commercial services
Marketing
Tourism
Tourism management