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RESOURCES: PAPERS & PRESENTATIONS

Author : Larry Dwyer & Verity Anne Greenwood
School/Work Place : UNSW Australia Business School & Macquarie University, Australia
Contact : l.dwyer@unsw.edu.au
Year : 2016

Despite widespread recognition of the importance of all tourism stakeholders adopting sustainability attitudes and practices, with a huge descriptive and prescriptive literature highlighting ‘best practice’, things seem to be getting worse.  While business operators and destination managers seek ways of expanding tourism, there is growing evidence that its continued expansion is now producing diminishing returns for providers and host communities that rely on volume growth to compensate for yield declines, as well as generating increasingly adverse social and environmental costs (TII, 2012). We have reached a fork in the road - - - The Road to Decline (Pollock, 2012) involves ‘business as usual’, ‘saluting while the ship sinks’. Given the forces that underpin continued tourism growth the ‘business as usual’ approach to tourism development can be expected to lead to more adverse environmental and social impacts. Despite the adoption of sustainability practices worldwide, such as Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) (Lindgreen and Swaen, 2010), Triple Bottom Line Reporting (Dwyer, 2005), and more recently Shared Corporate Value (Porter and Kramer, 2012), there is no indication that tourism’s problems globally are being solved. It is argued that current corporate sustainability and corporate social responsibility efforts are doing no more than inching firms toward reducing their negative impacts, and focusing on becoming ‘less unsustainable’ while overlooking the need to restore and rejuvenate, or move towards becoming ‘‘more sustainable (Ehrenfeld, 2008). Others argue that in many cases, firms espouse these principles but do not apply them in any serious way (Pollock, 2015). Even if a growing proportion of tourism operators were each to reduce the size of their negative social and environmental impacts, the expansion of tourism globally means that the absolute volume of negative impacts will continue to increase. We have every reason to be sceptical that widespread serious adoption of these practices will occur while current modes of thinking prevail.


List of Articles
No. Subject Viewssort Date
14 Think Tank XVI Polar bears, Climate Change, CSR and Sustainable Tourism 711 Jul 02, 2016

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Author: Jeremy Pearce 

Year: 2016 

13 Think Tank XVI Spirituality and corporate social responsibility in to... file 682 Jul 01, 2016

This ongoing study investigates the role of spirituality for corporate social responsibility (CSR) by tourism businesses in lesser developed countries and the implications this has at the destination level. While much of the world’s tourism...

Author: Alexandra Law, Putu Indah Rahmawati & Terry De Lacy 

Year: 2016 

12 Think Tank XVI Empowering communities and enabling conservation: Revi... file 674 Jul 01, 2016

The Africa Foundation a non-profit organization was founded in 1992 when Conservation Corporation Africa (since renamed and rebranded to &Beyond) was founded in South Africa. A central principle of the Conservation Corporation, safari l...

Author: Kevin Mearns 

Year: 2016 

11 Think Tank XVI United we stand, divided we fall: Strategies for engag... file 656 Jul 01, 2016

Many tourism corporate responsibility programs require the support and/or compliance of guests or customers, yet little attention has been paid to the design of strategies to encourage this compliance. Research in the areas of tourist inter...

Author: Karen Hughes & Gianna Moscardo 

Year: 2016 

OPA: 2016 Outstanding Paper Award Winner 

10 Think Tank XVI The Influences of Hotel Contexts on Tourist Behaviour.... file 610 Jul 01, 2016

Sustainability deals with the relation between people and their environment. The configuration of this connection and the communication between the two are decisive when talking about a socially acceptable, ecologically compatible and econo...

Author: Stefan Raich 

Year: 2016 

9 Think Tank XVI Examining Corporate Social Responsibility in Tourism: ... file 571 Jul 01, 2016

One of the biggest challenges facing the tourism industry and policy makers is the emerging and fast growing ‘sharing economy’. Keeping abreast of this, disruptive but potentially transformative phenomenon has been challenging for industry,...

Author: Stephen Wearing & Kevin Lyons 

Year: 2016 

8 Think Tank XVI Reaching the hard to reach: CSR and employee engagemen... file 559 Jul 02, 2016

As the duties and behaviour of organizations within the tourism industry evolve to accommodate expectations of pro-sustainable business change, so too does the role and responsibility of employees within these organisations. As key actors i...

Author: Kelsy Hejjas, Caroline Scarles & Graham Miller 

Year: 2016 

7 Think Tank XVII Lack of transparency - a barrier for the diffusion of ... file 543 Aug 17, 2017

Throughout the last two decades, the tourism industry has changed due to the revolutionary development in the realm of information and communication technologies (ICT) (Amaro & Duate, 2013; Law et al., 2004; Minghetti & Buhalis, 2010...

Author: Sven-Olaf Gerdt, Elisa Wagner & Gerhard Schewe 

Year: 2017 

6 Think Tank XVI eTraining for Sustainable Tourism: Investing in Skills... file 496 Jul 02, 2016

This proposed presentation examines the current state of “eTraining” opportunities (e.g. distance learning programs, online courses, live seminars) supporting professional skills development for tourism professionals, with a particular focu...

Author: Ayako Ezaki 

Year: 2016 

5 Think Tank XVII Finding and Fostering Our Future Tourism Leaders: Unde... file 487 Aug 17, 2017

The hospitality and tourism industry is facing a serious skilled manpower shortage globally, and the best way to meet the manpower needs of the industry is through training and education. The shortage of skilled talent is a global issue in t...

Author: Grace K.S. Ho & Rob Law 

Year: 2017 

4 Think Tank XVI Certification for Sustainable Tourism in Germany – Ove... file 443 Jul 02, 2016

Certification schemes for sustainable tourism can be seen as a key voluntary instrument to measure, verify and communicate the CSR management and performance of tourism businesses. Today a large number of such schemes can be found around th...

Author: Wolfgang Strasdas 

Year: 2016 

3 Think Tank XVI The moderating role of values in planned behaviour: th... file 439 Jul 02, 2016

In the past five years, we (a group of researchers from the Leeds Becket University and the Open University of Catalonia) have been working on different studies about the CSR motivations, barriers and practices in tourism small and medium e...

Author: Lluís Garay, Xavier Font & August Francesc Corrons 

Year: 2016 

2 Think Tank XVI Volunteering and donations for biodiversity conservati... file 425 Jul 01, 2016

In 2010, the newly elected government of New Zealand, of neo-liberal orientation, has adopted its Business Growth Agenda. This has been implemented through a series of legal, policy and organizational changes, affecting the governance of th...

Author: Valentina Dinica 

Year: 2016 

1 Think Tank XVI Can Tourism Businesses Foster Better Inclusion for Peo... file 387 Jul 02, 2016

It is difficult to deny that despite its increased popularity, the concept of social entrepreneurship has not received a clearer understanding in a theoretical context. Zahra, Gedajlovic, Neubaum, and Shulman (2009) list 20 definitions of s...

Author: Kristof Tomej 

Year: 2016 

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