by C. Michael Hall (Author)
Tourism is a critical and cutting-edge introduction to the major issues surrounding the production and consumption of tourism and its associated effects for the 21st century. Tourism is presented as one of the key social science disciplines by which contemporary human mobility can be understood.
Issues are examined in terms of the key concepts of contemporary social and environmental studies, such as globalisation, localisation, identity, security and global environmental change. It also utilises the concept of mobility to provide a coherent framework for analysing the development, nature and issues surrounding this worldwide industry which is integral to many government's regional development strategies.
Tourism helps provide an understanding of the contemporary forces shaping tourism and its study in a manner that connects the field to broader policy and scientific debate and which is approachable by students of tourism at all levels.
This core text is designed to meet the demands of tourism students for a more conceptual, innovative and critical examination of the discipline in the context of the wider economic, political, and social environment within which the phenomenon of tourism mobility occurs.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 468
Edition: 1
Publisher: Pearson Education Canada A critical and cutting-edge introduction to the major issues surrounding the production and consumption of tourism and its associated effects for the 21st century.
Published: 21 Dec 2004
ISBN 10: 058232789X
ISBN 13: 9780582327894
Book Overview:
Carefully designed and well structured... It provides a broad international introduction from a macro-level perspective to tourism development issues and the wider field of tourism studies.
...its comprehensiveness and advice on further reading accompanied by discussion questions at the end of each chapter make it a valuable addition to reading lists for students, practitioners and policy makers in tourism and across the social sciences who want to examine tourism from a more conceptual, innovative and crtical aspect.
Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change, v3 n3 2005