- Landscape Diversity – A place should contain a variety of different landscape features that are blended together to offer visual and other sensory stimulation.
- Sensory Coherence – Colors, smells, sounds, light, touch (including the sense of movement) all need to be considered and should blend in a logical and pleasing manner.
- Environmental Familiarity – Tourists visiting a new place need things that ground them and which make them feel comfortable and safe, including identifiable objects, spaces of privacy, and open spaciousness.
- Cognitive Challenges – Tourists also need to be challenged by the places that they visit, through varying degrees of complexity, mystery, surprise and exhilaration
This is an affiliated blog for the journal, Tourism Geographies at TGJournal.com, for posting editorial comments, book reviews and preliminary research notes that may also appear in the journal.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Topophilia and Emotional Geographies in Tourism Destinations
Monday, October 24, 2011
Crossing Chasms: The Role of Distance in Tourism
(also posted at Hospitality.Blognotions.com)
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Emerging Research Themes for Tourism: Insights from Geography
2. City Hubs and Networks – This is also a concept that has been around for awhile in travel and tourism studies, though not a major part of the field. Emerging geography research is still looking at the idea of transportation hubs (air and sea), but also extending that into “brainports” (aka “centers of competence”), the influence of municipalities on regional policies related to theorizing policy networks, sustainability and environmental governance, transnational networking and sociotechnical regimes related to global civil society and NGOs, and the new geographies of global production networks focusing on the relationships between small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs) and international corporations.
3. Mobile Technologies and Place – This is, of course, a major new area of emerging activity and research. As such we are still evolving ways to study it. Geographers are interested in: how mobile devices change the spatial and temporal flexibility of individuals and organizations; how they change the ways in which material places are used and perceived; how technology transforms social and spatial relations, affects social identification, and transforms state-society and nature-society relations; and how information, communication and telecommunication technologies are becoming (or not) integrated into the everyday practices of businesses and households -- and with what socioeconomic consequences.
5. Multicultural Peoples – This is a popular topic in the broader social sciences that tourism researchers have touched upon to some degree. Topics include multicultural people's sense of place and the various belongings they have to where they grew up, where they live, where they travel, and where their ancestors were from. Also of interest are the intersections of race with gender, class, religion, and space; spatialities of post-racial thinking; and the growing diversity in both metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas the developed world.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
China's Exploding Tourism Economy: Three Examples
The cable car at Zhangjiajie National Park, Hunan Province, China |
(2) Feng Huang - On Google+ I commented that Feng Huang was a Chinese version of Rothenburg ob der Tauber in Germany. This is both in terms of the atmosphere (old buildings renovated and filled with tourist-oriented shops and foods), and the masses of tourists that are found there during the peak summer season. I had never heard of Feng Huang (Phoenix) before this conference, and the photos that I could find of it when I put the conference website together showed old buildings and almost no people! (see http://www.geog.nau.edu/igust/China2011/)
More photos of Fenghuang can be found here: https://picasaweb.google.com/alanalew/FenghuangChina
(3) Weihai - I have never seen a Chinese city like this one. It has a population of about 150,000 people (very small by Chinese standards) spread out along a series of long, sandy swimming beaches. Traffic jams are almost non-existent, and the pace of life is much slower than in I am used to seeing in China. About a third of the people at breakfast at my Shandong University hotel were Russian families who come here from Siberia to enjoy the beach.
More photos of Weihai can be found here: https://picasaweb.google.com/alanalew/WeihaiChina
Friday, June 10, 2011
Us and Them among Tourists in Taiwan
Growth in Mainland Chinese to Taiwan & Sun Moon Lake
2009 – 600,969 – 92.5%
2010 – 1,165,549 – 98.8%
Wednesday, May 04, 2011
The Sustainable Tourism Conundrum: Would you Stop Traveling to Save the Planet?
Would you stop traveling to save the planet? That is the challenge of sustainable tourism! #aag2011
I posted that on Twitter on April 13, 2011 while listening to a presentation at the annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers. It was my most re-tweeted post at the conference, and one of the most re-tweeted of all of the #AAG2011 tagged posts.
The comment was written in response to a presentation by Antti Honkanen (University of Eastern Finland), titled Sustainability and the democratization of tourism - The limits of growth in travelling abroad.
Antti presented the essential conundrum for all of us who love to travel, but are also concerned about the major negative impacts that humans are having on the environment. That it was re-tweeted by several other people indicates, to me, that many of us are troubled by this issue.
Here is a edited and shortened version of Antti's presentation abstract (from the online AAG 2011 program) -
- Does everyone, if wealthy enough, need to be a tourist? Or are we starting to reach some limits of growth for tourism?
This paper asks whether the propensity to spend a holiday abroad has reached its limit for growth in some social or geographical groups, based on age, income, socioeconomic status, education, gender and country of residence. The study is based on survey data from Eurobarometer 25 (1985), Eurobarometer 48.0 (1997) and Flash Eurobarometer 258 (2008).
According to the results, while differences exist, travelling abroad has become more common among all groups over the years 1985-2008. The democratization of tourism appears to be continuing, even if some lower societal groups are left out due to increasing social inequality. The propensity to travel abroad for their main vacation holiday has increased in almost all countries. Some limits of growth, however, may be seen among the upper classes.
The apparent answer to my Twitter post is "No" - we (including myself) are not willing to stop traveling to save the planet.
We are willing to tweak how we travel (using hybrid cars or developing alternative airplane fuels), and we are willing to pay a little more to try and compensate for our impacts (staying in ecolodges or paying to plant trees), but we are not willing to stop traveling -- which would have the biggest impact on reducing CO2 levels.
Of course, if we stopped traveling we would also have a huge impact on the livelihood of all the workers and businesses that are involved, to varying degrees, in the the fifth or sixth largest industry worldwide (which is what I have estimated the size of the tourism industry to be).
And that is the Sustainable Tourism Conundrum -- how to balance the Economics impacts of tourism (usually considered good) with its Environmental impacts (mostly considered bad). There are a lot of other cultural ans social issues related to sustainability and tourism, but I believe that the economic-environment tension is its most fundamental challenge.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
The Best Tourism Places
- Sensual Diversity: Sight, Taste, Smell, Touch
- Landscape Diversity: Physical and Human
- Experiential Diversity: Both Predictable/Safe and Unpredictable/Risk
- Mixed Accessibility: Mostly Easy, Some Challenges
- Local Authenticity: Local Tourists and People at major sites
- Tourism Incognita: More mysteries around every corner
Saturday, April 09, 2011
Tourism Incognita Part 2: Terra incognita and Topophilia Presentation Video
Contributeur(s) majeur(s) : Lew, Alan, A. Date : 2011-01-27
Production : Université des Antilles et de la Guyane ; CEREGMIA : Centre d'études et de recherche en économie, gestion et modélisation informatique appliquée
Extrait de : Conférence Internationale du Tourisme "The changing world of coastal, island and tropical tourism", 27-29 janvier 2011. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, campus de Schoelcher, Martinique .
Provenance : Université des Antilles et de la Guyane. Service commun de la documentation
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Tourism Incognita - The Importance of the Unexpected
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Nostalgia for the Family Holiday Vacation
by Alan A. Lew, Department of Geography, Planning and Recreation, Northern Arizona University, USA
A Literature Review of:
Are We There Yet? The Golden Age of American Family Vacations by Susan Sessions Rugh (University of Kansas Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-7006-1588-9)
- and -
Theme Park by Scott A. Lukas (Reaktion Books, 2008, ISBN 978-1-86189-394-9)
One of the stories that I tell people about how and why I became a scholar of geography and tourism has to do with my childhood upbringing. Summer family vacations were an important part of my early experiences, and may have contributed to my adult interest in tourism and travel as both a vocation and an avocation. ...
Access the full article for free at InformaWorld
Published in: Tourism Geographies, Volume 12, Issue 4 November 2010 , pages 568 - 571
A Review of “Tourism in the USA: A Spatial and Social Synthesis”
Tourism in the USA: A Spatial and Social Synthesis
by Dimitri Ioannides & Dallen J. Timothypublished by Routledge, London and New York, 2010, ISBN 0-415-95685-4

This 222-page book sets out to give a comprehensive overview of tourism in the USA. The title hints that the book is not only about tourism studies but includes many elements of geography, in particular, and social sciences, in general. Ioannides and Timothy state that their 'aim is to provide an overview and detailed account of the workings of tourism as a modern-day phenomenon in the United States of America' (p. 3). Their rationale is, at least in part, an attempt to address the fact that 'despite all the fuss about tourism in the USA, it is more than clear that it is a misunderstood phenomenon' (p. 3). In short, Tourism in the USA: A spatial and social synthesis offers an excellent overview of its subject and makes the phenomenon of one of the largest tourism economies in the world better understood.
Access the full article for free at InformaWorld
Published in Tourism Geographies, Volume 12, Issue 4 November 2010 , pages 575 - 577
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Time as a Major Barrier to Sustainable Development
Published in: Tourism Geographies, Volume 12, Issue 3, August 2010, pages 481 - 483
* just defining what sustainable development is;
* trying to making connections between sustainability issues that exist at different scales (from personal to community to global);
* trying to make connections between sustainability issues that exist in different industries and activities (total life-cycle costing issues); and
* deciding how to properly balance environmental, social and ecological issues.
Most of these issues are mentioned in the literature on sustainable development (including my study area of sustainable tourism) in some way or another. One major challenge, however, that seems to never come up is the limitation of the human perception of time. 'Be here now' is, unfortunately, how most of us behave too much of the time. ...
Landscape, Tourism and Meaning
Published in: Tourism Geographies, Volume 12, Issue 3, August 2010, pages 484 - 486
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Publishing Tourism Geography Research
Published in: Tourism Geographies, Volume 12, Issue 2, May 2010, pages 324 - 328
At the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers held in Las Vegas, Nevada (22-27 March), geographers shared their experiences as participants in a stimulating and thought-provoking panel on 'Publishing Tourism Geography Research'. I organized this session in order to elicit recommendations from geographers with extensive publication records and with experience editing, reviewing, developing book projects, founding journals and experience with department and university administration where institutional research standards for tenure and promotion decisions are developed and put into effect. ...
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Wednesday, November 04, 2009
The 4 Best Tourism Journals!
Shaul Krakover sent the photo above, saying:
“I attach here a photo taken at our Tourism Destination Development and Branding Conference, held October 14-15, 2009, at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Eilat Campus, Israel.
The photo presents the 4 best tourism journals! It was taken in a session on "Publishing in the Academic Hospitality and Tourism Literature: Trends and Challenges" with the participation of the following (from Right to Left):
- John Tribe, Editor in Chief of the Annals of Tourism Research
- Rick Perdue, Editor of Journal of Travel Research
- Abraham Pizam, Editor in Chief of the International Journal of Hospitality
Management, and
- Shaul Krakover, Associate editor of Tourism Geographies.”