1 / 8

Tourism and the Natural Environment: Past, Present and Future

Tourism and the Natural Environment: Past, Present and Future. Dr. David Bruce Weaver Griffith University Australia. THE PAST (<mid-1990s). ‘Pure’ growth paradigm. - free markets, minimal regulation. - preference for sustained mass tourism growth.

madelyn
Download Presentation

Tourism and the Natural Environment: Past, Present and Future

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tourism and the Natural Environment:Past, Present and Future Dr. David Bruce Weaver Griffith University Australia

  2. THE PAST (<mid-1990s) ‘Pure’ growth paradigm • - free markets, minimal regulation • - preference for sustained mass tourism growth • - wholesale manipulation of natural environment to • accommodate tourism growth = widespread environmental deterioration, leading to destination stagnation and decline

  3. (Rejuvenation) Assumes: unlimited demand - free markets Stagnation # of visitors (Continued stagnation) (Decline) Development Critical carrying capacity threshold Involvement Exploration Time Idea that unregulated tourism ‘destroys itself’ is embodied in the destination life-cycle model of Richard Butler: Consolidation

  4. THE PRESENT (mid-1990s to c.2010) ‘Modified’ growth paradigm • - emergence of ‘sustainable development’ and then • ‘sustainable tourism’ • - i.e., one could still have growth, but it could be achieved • without damaging the environment (i.e. capacity threshold • can be raised)

  5. THE PRESENT (mid-1990s to c.2010) Actions of the tourism industry • - ‘institutionalisation’ of sustainability rhetoric in • mission statements and codes of conducts • - cosmetic practices (profitable, high profile; e.g. recycling) - basic certification for some businesses/products - industry awards (e.g. Tourism for Tomorrow) Results? At best a slower rate of environmental deterioration Actions of the tourism industry indicate ‘paradigm nudge’ rather than ‘paradigm shift’ – or ‘superficial environmentalism’

  6. superficial environmentalists ≃ 50% non-environmentalists ≃ 25% Environmentalists ≃ 25% THE PRESENT (mid-1990s to c.2010) Why the gap between the rhetoric and the actions/effects? • - minimal government interference • - consumer (tourist) satisfaction with actions, due to • dominance of ‘superficial environmentalists’ in society:

  7. REACTIVE CHANGE Govt. Regulation Societal Change Consumer Advocacy Industry Change Self-regulation PROACTIVE CHANGE THE FUTURE (> c.2010) Genuine paradigm shift → Green paradigm? Climate Change Energy Shock

  8. THE FUTURE (> c.2010) What is the change? • - environmental protection (micro & macro) • - environmental rehabilitation (micro & macro) - meaningful certification (i.e. third party verification) - consumer education (social marketing) - equilibrium rather than growth

More Related