Pro-poor Tourism: Who Benefits?: Perspectives on Tourism and Poverty Reduction

Edited by: C. Michael Hall

Format:
Hardback
Related Formats:
Ebook(PDF)
ISBN:
9781845410759
Published:
Publisher:
Channel View Publications
Number of pages:
176
Dimensions:
248mm x 168mm
Availability:
Available
Price: £89.95
Price: $129.95
Price: €109.95
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Pro-poor tourism – tourism that is intended to result in increased net benefits for poor people – is currently receiving enormous attention from the World Tourism Organization, the UN system, governments, industry, and NGOs and is an integral component of many sustainable development strategies in the less developed countries. Through a series of cases and reviews from experts in the field this book provides one of the first assessments of the effectiveness of pro-poor tourism as a development strategy and tackles the issue of who benefits from tourism's potential role in poverty reduction. This timely book therefore makes a major contribution to the ongoing debate about tourism's role in economic development, postcolonial politics, and North-South relations at a time when international trade negotiations appear poised to further open up developing countries to international tourism.

The book offers a descriptive, thematically consistent approach to understanding pro-poor tourism. The conceptualization of the area and drawing together of diverse ideas that surround the subject are the book's strengths.

Stephen Wearing, University of Technology, Sydney, in Annals of Tourism Research 35 (2008)

Michael Hall is Professor of Marketing at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. He also holds the position of Docent in the Department of Geography, University of Oulu, Finland and Visiting Professor, Faculty of Organisation and Management, Sheffield Hallam University, England. He has published widely in the tourism, environmental history and regional studies fields and has a long standing interest in issues of tourism planning and policy, social marketing and the capacity of tourism to contribute to sustainable development objectives at various scales of governance.

1. Editorial - Pro-Poor Tourism: Do 'Tourism Exchanges Benefit Primarily the Countries of the South'? - C. Michael Hall
2. Tourism and Poverty Alleviation: An Integrative Research Framework - Weibing Zhao & J. R. Brent Ritchie
3. Tourism as a Tool for Poverty Alleviation: A Critical Analysis of 'Pro-Poor Tourism' and Implications for Sustainability - Stephanie Chok, Jim Macbeth & Carol Warren
4. Growth Versus Equity: The Continuum of Pro-Poor Tourism and Neoliberal Governance - Daniela Schilcher
5. Lao Tourism and Poverty Alleviation: Community-Based Tourism and the Private Sector - David Harrison & Steven Schipani
6. Exploring the Tourism-Poverty Nexus - Regina Scheyvens
7. Nature-Based Tourism and Poverty Alleviation: Impacts of Private Sector and Parastatal Enterprises In and Around Kruger National Park, South Africa - Anna Spenceley & Harold Goodwin

Postgraduate, Research / Professional
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