Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Travel & Tourism- Marie
- TALC
- 1. Exploration
- small number of visitors arrive seeking unspoiled destinations
- creating few neg impacts
- attitudes of locals are positive towards tourism
- facilities are not geared towards tourists
- e.g. Canadian Arctic, Alaska
- 2. Involvement
- locals begin to provide resources (facilities, people, events) for tourists
- tourist numbers increase as destination becomes known as unspoilt spot
- locals have positive attitudes towards tourism
- e.g. Antarctica, Samoa (less developed Pacific Island), Sunny Beach 1980's
- 3. Development
- tourists increasing because of natural & cultural attractions & more human made facilities provided
- Development of tourism facilities by business people & tourism facilities
- Can take form of outside investment & large hotels dominate the skyline, supporting the tourism infrastructure in place
- Advertisement of destination to individual traveller & to mass market tourists
- e.g. North Queensland, Australia, Mexico, Benidorm 1970's
- 4. Consolidation
- local economy begins to rely heavily on tourism
- growth in facillities
- attracts more organised package tours
- strain on environment grows
- tourism developments infrastructure starts to show signs of aging & not coping with number of visitors
- e.g. Sunny Beach 1990's, Costa Del Sol/Benidorm 1980's, Fiiji, Butlins 1980/90
- 5. Stagnation
- reached in mature destinations & peak number of visitors reached
- quality of tourist facility
- ovbious environmental impacts
- destination is no longer fashionable, lots of people go elsewhere
- locals angered by this
- destination still has tourists but figures stay same
- e.g. benidorm 1990's, Sunny Beach 2020
- 6. Decline
- figures decline
- economy & environment suffer in area
- poor image of destination fails to attract tourists back
- e.g. costa del sol, blackpool 1990's, all uk sea resorts
- 7. Rejuvenation
- reimaging & regeneration of area
- new focus for tourism
- new attractions
- e.g. costs del sol, Benidorm early 2000's ,
brighton, avimore, blackpool, redcar,
butlins
- tourist numbers begin to increase
- Agents of development
- Public sector
- central gov
- grants for specific projects
- sspread benefits of tourism across country
- infrastructure
- DCMS
- responsible for tourism development
- responsible for tourism policy
- responsible for arts, musuems, heritage
- local authority
- responsible on a local level
- infrastructure
- planning control
- grants
- planning permission
- tourist boards
- encourage development of tourism
- market tourism
- local enterprise partnerships
- increase wealth of an area
- aid regeneration
- Private sector
- landowners
- either develop land themselves or sell it to developers
- laws & regulations in place to restrict
land use- minimise conflict
- consultancies
- give specialist advice
- facility providers
- includes a mass of companies
- voluntary sector
- community groups
- aim of influencing specific issues
- pressure groups
- organised groups wanting to minimise
effect of development e.g. toursim concern, national trust
- Objectives of tourism development
- economic objectives
- employment creation
- increased foreign currency earnings
- leakage
- increased earnings for commercial operators
- economic development & regeneration
- environmental objectives
- preservation of wildlife
- environmental education
- environmental improvements
- socio-cultural objectives
- improvements to quality of life
- promoting understanding
- staged authenticity
- political objectives
- image enhancement
- creation of local and national identity
- Types of tourism
- ecotourism
- travelling to undisturbed
natural areas. Combines
enjoyment with studying
the wildlife & natural
environment.
- ethical tourism
- tourism that promotes
acceptable standards of
behaviour for tourists. A
consideration for the
people & environment in
destinations.
- fair-trade tourism
- tourism that sees the local
community in partnership
with developers planning,
controlling & expanding
tourism developments =
benefit for local community
- green tourism
- a form of alternative
tourism generally
related to rural
tourism or nature
tourism (ecotourism)
- responsible tourism
- developers consider &
work in partnership with
local communities. Aim
to minimise negative
impacts. Respectful of
local community &
culture.
- sustainable tourism
- development which
conserves the quality of
the environment,
enhances the lives of the
community, sustains
economic activity &
maintains the visitors
experience
- niche tourism
- tourism which appeals
to a very specific
market e.g. golf
tourism & painting
holidays
- principles of responsible tourism
- minimise negative economic,
environmental and social-cultural
impacts
- plan how to control visitor numbers
- give locals jobs
- park & ride
- carry out environmental audit
- involve locals in all decisions
- create economic benefits for the local people &
improve their quality of life
- give locals jobs
- a rule to employ a % of locals
- provide training for locals for higher skilled jobs
- improve local infrastructure
- promotes the conservation of natural
& cultural heritage
- give grants to organisations for building conservations
- create national parks / wildlife reserves
- allow access to historical buildings to develop learning opportunities
- promotes respect between tourists & local people
- educate tourists about local culture
- employ locals as tour guides to create interaction
between the locals & tourists so that tourists appreciate
the culture.