Overview
- Editors:
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C. Michael Hall
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Department of Tourism, University of Otago, New Zealand
Department of Marketing, Stirling University, Scotland
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Allan M. Williams
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Department of Geography, University of Exeter, UK
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Table of contents (15 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-viii
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- Allan M. Williams, C. Michael Hall
Pages 1-52
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- Edith Szivas, Michael Riley
Pages 53-72
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- Shaul Krakover, Yuval Karplus
Pages 103-118
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- Joanne Fountain, C. Michael Hall
Pages 153-168
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- Nguyen Thu Huong, Brian King
Pages 221-240
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- Steven Boyne, Fiona Carswell, Derek Hall
Pages 241-256
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- C. Michael Hall, Allan M. Williams
Pages 277-289
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Back Matter
Pages 291-294
About this book
The origins of this book lie in a project of the International Geographical Union Study Group on the Geography of Sustainable Tourism. The theme, Tourism and migration', reflects the growing interests of tourism geographers - in common with other geographers and social scientists - to reach across traditional cleavages in the way research is undertaken and knowledge is formed. In this instance, the aim was to connect the largely discrete research domains of tourism studies and migration. This was informed not only by awareness of the limitations of disciplinary barriers, but also by the growing need to respond to the emergence of new forms of mobility and circulation, which fitted uncomfortably into many of the analytical categories of tourism and migration studies. The extension of property rights across boundaries (e.g. second homes, vacation homes and time shares), space-time convergence, changing approaches to work and leisure, and structural changes in economies and the demographic profiles of societies are only some of the factors which have generated these new forms of mobility. These serve to bind places and individuals in new and challenging ways with implication for both movers and stayers. The various chapters of this volume bring together a range of dimensions and locations within which to study the relationships between tourism and migration.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Tourism, University of Otago, New Zealand
C. Michael Hall
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Department of Marketing, Stirling University, Scotland
C. Michael Hall
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Department of Geography, University of Exeter, UK
Allan M. Williams