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217 result(s) for "Yeoman, Ian"
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Editorial: Q. What can we learn from Sunderland AFC about the future of tourism? A. Absolutely everything
On days when Sunderland AFC loses at home, the resultant anger, frustration and depression among supporters is known to increase the risk of acute coronary and cerebrovascular events, including sudden death (Kirkup and Merrick, 2003). Sunderland was a city of shipbuilding, an industry that died because of high production costs and competition. A Sunderland AFC game acts like a tourist attraction: large numbers come to eat, drink, shop, visit museums and take tours of the stadia themselves (Pratt, 2022). Sunderland AFC is a training ground for future leaders of the tourism industry, take Jordan Henderson (Captain of Liverpool FC) and Jordan Pickford (England Goalkeeper) as examples.
The future past of tourism : historical perspectives and future evolutions
A critical account of the historical evolution of tourism through the identification and discussion of key turning points. Based on these considerations, future turning points are identified and evaluated. The core findings of the book provide the first perspective on how the history of tourism will shape its future.
Editorial – Tourism Trends – Part 1
(2020) make a number of observations about enhancing an understanding of the evolution of actor networks for destination development to build a resilient network. The tourism industries response to climate change has being sustainable tourism. Another technology paper by Aamir and Atsan (2020) addresses remarkable trend of multisided platforms in the travel industry with the help of which travel agencies and global distribution systems can reinforce their intermediary role.
The future of food tourism
Purpose The authors identify five driving forces of changes that are shaping the discourses about food tourism. The paper aims to discuss this issue.Design/methodology/approach The approach used by this paper is a general review.Findings The five driving forces identified are: food tourism as political capital; food tourism as a visionary state; what it means to be a foodie; the drive for affluence and exclusivity; fluid experiences in a post-modernist world.Originality/value The five drivers of change are identified as the core of any food tourism strategy for policy makers.
Editorial: The importance of a regenerative approach
[...]environmental attachment and green motivation promote tourists' pro-environmental behavior. Visitor management Borobudur is an iconic temple in Indonesia and one of the biggest and most impressive Buddhist temples in the world, with UNESCO World Heritage status. Because of its status, the increasing number of visitors has had major economic benefits for the community, but it has also been creating overtourism-related problems. (2024) advocate local visitor management strategies to address overtourism including setting limits on the number of visitors, increasing the visitor area, providing guided tours only, working with price mechanisms, mitigating the physical impacts of visits and involving the local community in the value chain.
Trends in family tourism
Purpose Families represent a large and growing market for the tourism industry. Family tourism is driven by the increasing importance placed on promoting family togetherness, keeping family bonds alive and creating family memories. Predictions for the future of family travel are shaped by changes in demography and social structures. With global mobility families are increasingly geographically dispersed and new family markets are emerging. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the trends that shape the understanding of families and family tourism.Design/methodology/approach This paper examines ten trends that the authors as experts in the field identify of importance and significance for the future of family tourism.Findings What emerges is that the future of family tourism lies in capturing the increasing heterogeneity, fluidity and mobility of the family market.Originality/value The paper contributes to the understanding about the changes taking place in family tourism and what it means to the tourism industry in the future.
Editorial: Futureproofing: Ensuring Tourism Does Not Become Obsolete
Wielenga (2023) uses architecture as a framing tool for nature thus stimulating transformative experiences among visitors in nature-based tourism. The study analyzes the future potential in Serbia for tourism as a women’s empowerment framework. Increasingly sophisticated chatbots are introducing novel approaches, re-shaping the dynamics among tourists and service providers and fostering a remarkable behavioral change in the overall sector.
Editorial: How COVID-19 changed the world of tourism research
(2023) review the conceptual and empirical studies associated with COVID-19 and argue the effect on mobility and tourism behaviour at destinations in order to identify proposals, forecasts and recommendations to guide the future research agenda on the subject. The study identified six main factors: social distancing and hygiene, COVID-19 and choices, disinfection of tourism facilities, COVID-19 and health concerns, COVID-19 and familiarity, and COVID-19 and travel preferences. (2023) explore the impact and consequences of COVID-19 on Indian tourism using a modelling approach to forecast the expected loss of foreign tourist arrivals (FTAs) in India for 10 months.