Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism -

Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism (eBook)

C. Michael Hall (Herausgeber)

eBook Download: EPUB
2024 | 2. Auflage
704 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-119-75378-0 (ISBN)
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The first authoritative overview of tourism studies published post-COVID-19

The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism remains a definitive reference in this interdisciplinary field. Edited and authored by leading scholars from around the world, this state-of-the-art volume provides a comprehensive critical overview of tourism studies across the social sciences. In-depth yet accessible chapters combine established theories and cutting-edge developments and analysis, addressing a wide range of current and emerging topics, issues, debates, and themes.

The second edition of the Companion reflects the complexity of the changing field, incorporating new developments, diverse theories, core themes, and fresh perspectives throughout. New and revised chapters explore the organization and practice of tourism, pressing health, economic, social, and environmental challenges, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on tourism and the tourist industry, empowerment, placemaking, mindfulness and wellbeing, resident attitudes towards tourism, Chinese outbound tourism, public transport, long-distance walking, and more.

  • Covers the full spectrum of tourism studies, including its connections to geography, sociology, urban studies, sustainability, marketing, management, globalization, and policy
  • Outlines exciting new and emerging approaches, theoretical foundations, and major developments in tourism studies
  • Offers perspectives on major topics including the role of tourism in the Anthropocene, global and local change, resilience, innovation, and consumer and business behavior
  • Sets an agenda for future tourism research and reviews significant issues in theory, method, and practice
  • Features new contributions from an international panel of younger scholars and established researchers

With a wealth of up-to-date bibliographic references and extensive coverage of the tourism-related literature, The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism, Second Edition, is required reading for undergraduate students, postgraduate researchers, lecturers, and academic scholars in tourism studies, tourism management, tourism geography, tourism theory, sociology, urban studies, and globalization, as well as professionals working in tourism and hospitality management worldwide.


The first authoritative overview of tourism studies published post-COVID-19 The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism remains a definitive reference in this interdisciplinary field. Edited and authored by leading scholars from around the world, this state-of-the-art volume provides a comprehensive critical overview of tourism studies across the social sciences. In-depth yet accessible chapters combine established theories and cutting-edge developments and analysis, addressing a wide range of current and emerging topics, issues, debates, and themes. The second edition of the Companion reflects the complexity of the changing field, incorporating new developments, diverse theories, core themes, and fresh perspectives throughout. New and revised chapters explore the organization and practice of tourism, pressing health, economic, social, and environmental challenges, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on tourism and the tourist industry, empowerment, placemaking, mindfulness and wellbeing, resident attitudes towards tourism, Chinese outbound tourism, public transport, long-distance walking, and more. Covers the full spectrum of tourism studies, including its connections to geography, sociology, urban studies, sustainability, marketing, management, globalization, and policy Outlines exciting new and emerging approaches, theoretical foundations, and major developments in tourism studies Offers perspectives on major topics including the role of tourism in the Anthropocene, global and local change, resilience, innovation, and consumer and business behavior Sets an agenda for future tourism research and reviews significant issues in theory, method, and practice Features new contributions from an international panel of younger scholars and established researchers With a wealth of up-to-date bibliographic references and extensive coverage of the tourism-related literature, The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Tourism, Second Edition, is required reading for undergraduate students, postgraduate researchers, lecturers, and academic scholars in tourism studies, tourism management, tourism geography, tourism theory, sociology, urban studies, and globalization, as well as professionals working in tourism and hospitality management worldwide.

Notes on Contributors


Bailey Ashton Adie is a Postdoctoral Researcher in Spatial Resilience (part of the FRONT research programme) in the Geography Research Unit at the University of Oulu, Finland. Her research interests include community resilience, second homes, natural hazards and tourism, community‐based tourism, World Heritage tourism, tourism and development, dark tourism, film tourism, and heritage tourism. She is the author of World Heritage and Tourism: Marketing and Management (Routledge, 2019) and co‐editor of Second Homes and Climate Change (Routledge, 2023).

Alberto Amore is Assistant Professor in Tourism Geography at the University of Oulu, Finland. His research interests include urban tourism, destination governance, tourism and post‐disaster governance, destination resilience, regenerative tourism and tourism and biodiversity. He is author of Tourism and Urban Regeneration (Routledge, 2019) and co‐author of Tourism and Resilience (Channel view, 2018). He is Associate Editor of Tourism Management Perspectives and Social Media Editor for Current Issues in Tourism.

Richard S. Aquino is a Senior Lecturer in the Business School, University of Canterbury Christchurch, New Zealand. His research interests include tourism for sustainable development, social entrepreneurship, community development, tourism impact assessment, tourist behaviour, and decolonising tourism knowledge production.

Inoormaziah Azman is a senior lecturer at the Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia, serving the Tourism Department in the Faculty of Hotel and Tourism Management. She teaches undergraduate courses in the Tourism Management area, including Principles of Tourism, Fundamentals of Hospitality and Tourism Industry, Tourism Planning and Development, Tourist Behaviour, Event Management, Park and Recreation; and supervises undergraduate and postgraduate student dissertations.

Bernhard F. Bichler is a Lecturer FHWien der WKW (University of Applied Sciences for Management & Communication), Austria, and Referent Forschung, Entwicklung und Unternehmensservice, Bundesministerium für Land‐ und Forstwirtschaft, Regionen und Wasserwirtschaft. He focus on current issues in tourism research, ranging from customers to companies and destinations.

Gareth Butler is a Senior Lecturer in Tourism at Flinders University, Australia. He is also a Senior Research Affiliate at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa.

Ning (Chris) Chen is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Management, Marketing and Tourism at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. His primary areas of interest include identity and attachment theory in different context including place, branding, and sports, and the motivations and impact of word‐of‐mouth behaviours especially in social media. His research focus include place attachment, brand attachment, fandom, word‐of‐mouth (mouse), and personal connection.

Prem Chhetri is Professor at RMIT University in Australia. Prem obtained a Ph.D. in Geospatial Science from RMIT University in 2003. He is known internationally for the research in spatially‐integrated supply chain analytics and urban logistics. His recent research focused on port logistics, climate change, urban modelling, tourism potential mapping, emergency response, skills and training, and the application of GIS and GPS in transport, infrastructure and logistics planning.

Tim Coles is a Professor in the Department of Management at the University of Exeter Business School in the United Kingdom. His research interests are in the sustainable development of tourism, and he has a longstanding interest in the social responsibility of organisations and how this is studied.

Edward Commons is a former graduate student of the Business School, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.

Cecilia de Bernardi is a lecturer in sustainable destination development at Uppsala University, Sweden, and a postdoctoral student at Mid Sweden University. She has a PhD in social sciences with a focus on tourism and previously studied communication science, political science, Nordic culture and history and cultural as well as natural heritage in tourism. She also focuses on qualitative methods.

B. Bynum Boley is Associate Professor, Parks, Recreation and Tourism Management, University of Georgia, United States, and Director of the university’s Tourism Research Lab. His research focuses on sustainable tourism development and how the unique natural and cultural resources of communities can be protected, packaged and marketed to jointly increase sustainability, resident quality of life, and a community’s competitiveness as a tourism destination.

Hervé Corvellec is a Professor of Business Adminustration in the Department of Service Stucies, Lund University, Campus Helsingborg, Sweden. His fields of research and teaching are sustainability and organization theory, and he has been working for a long time with infrastructure issues (e.g., public library development, railroad planning, wind power siting, risk in public transportation, and waste management).

Larry Dwyer is a Professor in the Business School, University of Technology, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. He is a former President of the International Academy for the Study of Tourism and former President of the International Association for Tourism Economics. His research interests include economics of tourism, tourism management and policy.

David Dyason is a Senior Lecturer in Property Studies at Lincoln University, New Zealand, with a focus on land economics and property market analysis. He is an economist with an interest in property, economics, and impact assessment. His research interest and publications are in property, economics, geography, and planning and he continues to be involved as an advisor to the private and public sectors in economic and land‐use planning. Through his research, he aims to reveal the causal relationship between property and economics and how it influences economic development in the urban and rural landscape.

Eke Eijgelaar is a Researcher, Academy for Tourism, Centre for Sustainability, Tourism and Transport (CSTT), Breda University of Applied Sciences in the Netherlands. He specializes in the environmental impacts of tourism, with a focus on tourism energy use and emissions. This takes him to many related topics, such as high and low carbon forms of tourism (e.g., cruise tourism), and mitigation strategies and tools such as carbon management and carbon calculators, and more recently also to topics such as overtourism and aviation politics.

Peter Fieger is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at Federation University, Australia and Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of New England. Previously he was a Senior Research Fellow at the National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER) in Adelaide, where his main areas of research were in the quantitative analysis of surveys and administrative data collections in vocational education and its social, economic and labour market outcomes; and the Senior Economist at ChristchurchNZ, in Christchurch, New Zealand. His research focus also includes the service, hospitality and tourism industries and their role in the economy.

David A. Fennell is a Professor, Geography and Tourism Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Brock University, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada, and is also the Editor‐in‐chief of the Journal of Ecotourism. His research is focused on five main themes: ecotourism, tourism ethics, moral issues tied to the use of animals in tourism, sustainable tourism, and fly‐fishing.

Viachaslau Filimonau is Reader in Hospitality Innovation, Centre for Sustainability and Wellbeing in the Visitor Economy, School of Hospitality and Tourism Management, University of Surrey, UK and the Hotelschool The Hague, Den Haag, the Netherlands. His research interests include sustainable mobilities, water and carbon footprint management in tourism and hospitality operations, and environmental management in tourism and hospitality enterprises.

Jamie Gillen is Director and Associate Professor of the Global Studies Programme at the Faculty of Arts, Cultures, Languages and Linguistics, University of Auckland, New Zealand. His research interests centre on societies and everyday life in mainland Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam. He has written extensively about tourism, with a concentration on the politics of tourism, and maintains active research on urbanization, rural‐urban relations, agrarian change, and culture.

Sandhiya Goolaup is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Marketing and Tourism, School of Business and Economics, University of Linnaeus, Sweden. Her research interests include phenomenology, hermeneutic phenomenology, hermeneutics hospitality and tourism, food consumption, consumer experience, consumer behavior, tourist experience, value creation, tourism research, extraordinary experiences, and destination marketing.

Martin G. Gren is a Professor in Human Geography in the Department of Cultural Sciences, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden, and is a member of the Center for Climate Emergency Studies (Centre CES) at Linnaeus University, which is a transdisciplinary platform for research, education and action related to the climate emergency. He teaches human geography and his research interest is focused on the new earthly climate regime and the...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 11.7.2024
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Reisen Reiseführer
Wirtschaft
ISBN-10 1-119-75378-3 / 1119753783
ISBN-13 978-1-119-75378-0 / 9781119753780
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