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RESOURCES


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
314 Think Tank IX Ethical Confusion and Confusion of Ethics: Unpacking t... file 2184 Oct 13, 2013

For many decades authors (see Sontag, 1976, Baederholt, 2006, Chalfern, 1979, Crang, 1997) have recognised the fundamental role of photography within tourism. Many such as Urry (1999, 2002), Crouch (2000, 2002) and Crouch & Lubbren (200...

Author: Caroline Scarles 

Year: 2009 

313 Think Tank XII Evaluation of the accessibility of Monterrey's Tourism... file 2192 Nov 06, 2013

Despite several declarations, policies and regulations that seek to protect their rights, people with disabilities still encounter several constrains that impede their full participation in society, and, in particular, their access to and en...

Author: Blanca A. Camargo, Isabel Sánchez, Fátima Guajardo & Alejandro García 

Year: 2012 

312 Think Tank VII Social Responsibility and Innovation on Trafficking an... file 2193 Oct 13, 2013

Ethical questions related to globalization, human rights, unfair labor practices and trans-boundary exchanges of capital and work force create ever more complex challenges for the tourism sustainability agenda. In recent years, the tourism i...

Author: Camelia Tepelus 

Year: 2007 

311 Think Tank XVI Navigating Evolving Global Trends in Financial Crime: ... file 2255 Jul 02, 2016

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Author: Verity Anne Greenwood 

Year: 2016 

310 Think Tank XIV Welcoming Chinese Visitors and the Easternization of t... file 2257 Jun 26, 2014

Tourism academics, practitioners, governments and agencies around the world are in general agreement about the future of tourism in what commentators have tagged The Asian Century. Assuming demographic and economic conditions persist, the in...

Author: Patricia C. Johnson 

Year: 2014 

309 Think Tank XVI Tourists vs Tour operators Preferences for CSR Policie... file 2274 Jul 02, 2016

There is an increasing concern for environmental and social issues among international travelers. As a consequence, many tourist corporations have been exploring the implementation of Social Responsibility (SR) policies as a tool to gain co...

Author: Jorge E. Araña, Gianluca Goffi & Carmelo J. León 

Year: 2016 

308 Think Tank IX Recreation Specialisation and Destination Image: A cas... file 2302 Oct 13, 2013

Papua New Guinea (PNG) should be to Australia what Costa Rica and Belize are to the USA – a proximate and successful tourist destination that attracts sustainable numbers of tourists drawn to the extraordinary diversity of endemic wildlife,...

Author: Kevin Lyons, Kevin Markwell & Patricia Johnson 

Year: 2009 

307 Think Tank VII Outfitting and Guiding as Sustainable Tourism file 2324 Oct 13, 2013

The antecedents of the modern outfitter are numerous and varied, reaching far back into mythology, allegoric literature, history, and geographic exploration. Throughout history, guides have played two distinct roles, the pathfinder and the m...

Author: Norma Nickerson 

Year: 2007 

306 Think Tank XIX Designing sustainable tourist experiences – (how) does... file 2340 Oct 23, 2019

Key words: Nature Parks, sustainable tourism, customer journey, sustainable development, behaviour change Page: 188-193 Designing sustainable tourist experiences.pdf Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE /* Style Definitions */ tabl...

Author: Birgit Reutz 

Year: 2019 

305 Think Tank XV Social Representations of Tourist Selfies: New Challen... file 2407 Jul 27, 2015

A number of recent incidents have focussed media attention on the phenomenon of tourist selfies, described their negative consequences for tourist destinations and identified a number of challenges for tourist site managers. This paper repor...

Author: John Pearce & Gianna Moscardo 

Year: 2015 

304 Think Tank XII Tourist Cards - Experiences with Soft Mobility in Germ... file 2408 Nov 06, 2013

An increasing number of destinations face the negative sides of tourism transport. Especially, the motorized (individual) traffic can cause ecological problems due to a risen traffic volume, noise and air pollution or its negative effects on...

Author: Dorothea Dürkop & Sven Gross 

Year: 2012 

303 Think Tank XIV Exploring Youth Perspectives on Quality of Life and To... file 2417 Jun 26, 2014

The concept of Quality of Life (QoL) is implicit in conceptualisations of tourism, especially those used to develop and guide tourism policy and planning. At the individual level it is assumed that travel offers a number of different ways to...

Author: Anna Blackman, Gianna Moscardo, Andrea Schurmann & Laurie Murphy 

Year: 2014 

302 Think Tank XV The role of souvenir vendors in the cultural sustainab... file 2436 Jul 27, 2015

The research investigated the role of souvenir vendors in sustaining the social-cultural authenticity of Chichen Itza’s host community, a Mexican UNESCO World Heritage Site (WHS) (UNESCO, 2015a). The case study evaluated the Maya-descent ven...

Author: Ady Milman 

Year: 2015 

301 Think Tank IX Values: Dollars, trees or feelings? file 2440 Oct 13, 2013

The importance of values to tourism is but one aspect of the importance of values in human interactions with the natural environment and even more broadly to the human condition. However, attempts to understand the impact of values on behav...

Author: Denise Dillon 

Year: 2009 

300 Think Tank IV A Theoretical Perspective of Triple Bottom Line Report... file 2453 Oct 13, 2013

Triple Bottom Line is defined and explained within the context of a broad philosophical approach to business and a more narrow perspective of reporting performance. The impact of the broader notion of sustainable development, with its macro ...

Author: Jeffrey Faux 

Year: 2004 

299 Think Tank XV Lifelong learning for guiding and interpretation file 2537 Jul 27, 2015

Scholarship on guiding and interpretation positions formal training as a central factor in guide instruction. Guide training operates in the area that mediates between personal characteristics, attitudes and knowledge of the guides and what ...

Author: Julia N. Albrecht & Trisha Dwyer 

Year: 2015 

298 Think Tank VI How Sophisticated is the level of E-Commerce Adoption ... file 2538 Oct 13, 2013

The research aims to develop a conceptual model of e-commerce adoption in tourism enterprises. The paper begins with a literature review identifying the opportunities and competitive advantage for tourism enterprises associated with E-commer...

Author: Nina Mistilis & John D’Ambra 

Year: 2006 

297 Think Tank XI Use of Cases in an Ethical Teaching Resource for Touri... file 2546 Oct 14, 2013

Ethical problems are an integral part of all professions and academic disciplines (Clarkeburn, 2002). However, it is recognised that the increasing application of technology by students in research is not always matched by consideration of ...

Author: Carl Cater 

Year: 2011 

296 Think Tank V An Economic Explanation of the Net Benefits of Tourism... file 2567 Oct 13, 2013

International tourism is increasingly viewed as one of the best opportunities for a sustainable economic and social development of developing countries. There is also an increasing concern from public policy makers as to whether mass tourism...

Author: Mondher Sahli & Jean-Jacques Nowak 

Year: 2005 

295 Think Tank XV Can we eat it? Exploring the cultural challenges in ma... file 2567 Jul 27, 2015

Can we eat it? How did you stop the waves? Is there water in there? Where is the switch to turn it off? Will it eat me? These are just some of the many questions asked by visitors to uShaka Sea World in Durban, South Africa. While South Afri...

Author: Judy Mann & Roy Ballantyne & Jan Packer 

Year: 2015 

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