The global Covid-19 pandemic marks a watershed moment in recent history. Employing sociological and anthropological lenses, this timely volume helps us make sense of the pandemic’s impacts on tourism. In exploring coping strategies and robust transformations in these unique times at various sites and scales, it addresses vital questions on what the future might hold for tourism and its many stakeholders.
Freya Higgins Desbiolles, University of South Australia, Australia
<p>This volume, with its international perspective and holistic approach, poignantly captures the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on tourism. Its chapters cover the implications for businesses, the evolving attitudes towards spiritual tourism, and the changes facing tourism stakeholders and communities. Looking ahead, the book critically examines how the experiences of the past few years may – or may not – help guide tourism’s future.</p>
Lynn Minnaert, Edinburgh Napier University, UK
This timely book critically analyzes the possible impact of the pandemic on the tourism industry from a business/economy perspective, while also considering the social impact on spiritual tourism, gender, and the relationship between hosts and guests in this new era of our lives.
Metin Kozak, Kadir Has University, Turkey
This book employs epistemological, methodological and discursive approaches to explore the practices of tourism stakeholders in Covid-19 affected destinations and to understand and explain their everyday real-time doings and sayings. It discusses the changing practices of tourists and stakeholders at both micro and meso levels and provides a range of contexts and destination case studies offering insights into supply and demand. The issues examined in the volume will have continued implications for further study of the relationships between tourism, crises, pandemics and global travel. It will be a useful resource for researchers and students in tourism studies, geography, politics and policy, as well as sociology, history, crisis management and development studies.
This book employs epistemological, methodological and discursive approaches to explore the practices of tourism stakeholders in Covid-19 affected destinations. It discusses the changing practices of tourists and stakeholders at both micro and meso levels and provides a range of case studies offering insights into supply and demand.
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Erdinç Çakmak, Rami K. Isaac and Richard Butler: Introduction: Changing Practices of Tourism Stakeholders in Covid-19 Affected Destinations
Part 1: Changes in the Subfields of the Tourism Industry
Chapter 2. Marion Joppe: The Impacts of Covid-19 on the Airline Industry
Chapter 3. Zahed Ghaderi, Zahra Behboodi, Faraz Sadeghvaziri and Ian Patterson: The Impacts of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Tour Operators' Business in Iran: The Role of Organisational Learning and Resiliency
Chapter 4. Siamak Seyfi and C. Michael Hall: The Covid-19 Pandemic and Tourism Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs): Insights from a Developing Country Perspective
Part 2: Transition of Attitudes in Spiritual Tourism
Chapter 5. Ricardo Nicolas Progano: The Impact of the Covid-19 on Japanese Temple Stays: The 2021 Situation
Chapter 6. Daniel H. Olsen and Kiran A. Shinde: Practising Faith from Afar: The Impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic on Pilgrim Behaviour
Chapter 7. Nitasha Sharma: When Faith and Fear Intersect: Pilgrimage During the Covid-19 Pandemic
Part 3: Perceptions and Habitus Changes of Tourism Stakeholders
Chapter 8. Maree Gerke, Can-Seng Ooi and Heidi Dahles: Bourdieu on Tasmania: How Theory of Practice Makes Sense of the Emergence of Regenerative Tourism in Times of Covid-19
Chapter 9. G.K. Jayathilaka and W.H.M.S. Samarathunga: Covid-19, Tourism Structural Changes and the Habitus Adaptations at Tourist Destinations: Perspectives of Tourism Agents
Chapter 10. Meghann L. Muldoon, Alexandra Witte and Yu-Hua (Melody) Xu: Gendered (Im)mobilities in China: The Impacts of Covid-19 on Women in Tourism
Part 4: Emerging Perspectives on Post-Covid-19 Tourism
Chapter 11. Maximiliano E. Korstanje: Questionable Hospitality: New Relations and Tensions Between Hosts and Guests After Covid-19
Chapter 12. Philipp Wassler: Covid-19 and the Host Community: Towards an Uncertain Future?
Chapter 13. Phoebe Everingham: Rethinking Tourism for the Long-Term: Covid-19 and the Paradoxes of Tourism Recovery in Australia
Chapter 14. Rami K. Isaac, Erdinç Çakmak and Richard Butler: Conclusion: Reflections and Revanche
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Erdinç Çakmak is Senior Fellow at the Academy of Tourism, Breda University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands. His research interests are informal economies, tourism sociology, power relations in tourism and conflict-ridden destinations.
Rami K. Isaac is Senior Fellow at the Academy for Tourism, Breda University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands and Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Tourism and Hotel Management at Bethlehem University, Palestine. He has been working for 20 years in the field.
Richard Butler is Emeritus Professor at Strathclyde University and has been active for more than 40 years in the field. He is co-editor of Tourism as a Pathway to Hope and Happiness (with Tej Vir Singh and David Fennell, Channel View Publications, 2023).