The Practice of Sustainable Tourism
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The Practice of Sustainable Tourism

Resolving the Paradox

Michael Hughes, David Weaver, Christof Pforr, Michael Hughes, David Weaver, Christof Pforr

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eBook - ePub

The Practice of Sustainable Tourism

Resolving the Paradox

Michael Hughes, David Weaver, Christof Pforr, Michael Hughes, David Weaver, Christof Pforr

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Sustainable tourism is a widely used term that has accumulated considerable attention from researchers and policy makers over the past two decades. However, there is still an apparently wide gap between theory and practice in the area. Recent scholarly research has tended to focus on niche areas of alternative tourism rather than address the broader issues and vagaries and paradoxes that appear to plague the broader notion of sustainable tourism. As such, there is a need for a new and pragmatic analysis of sustainable tourism as an overarching idea and how this manifests in practice.

The Practice of Sustainable Tourism fulfils this need by offering a fresh perspective on sustainable tourism as an umbrella concept with inherent tensions. It presents a way of thinking about tourism based on the notion of finding common ground using the dialectic tradition of philosophy. Dialectics focusses on resolving opposing viewpoints by recognising they have common elements that can be combined into a rational and practical solution over time. As part of this approach, the book examines the strongly apparent tensions within alternative tourism as well as the paradox of continuing growth and other mass tourism related issues. It is divided into three parts, Part I includes chapters discussing the general concept of sustainable tourism, its history, current status and possible futures; Part II includes a range of destination case studies exploring how sustainable tourism has been applied and Part III includes perspectives from the tourism operator view.

Given the international content and challenging themes, the book will be appealing internationally to students, researchers and academics in the fields of tourism, geography, sustainability and social science.

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Informazioni

Editore
Routledge
Anno
2015
ISBN
9781317749677

1 Confronting the reality of paradox in sustainable tourism

Michael Hughes, Christof Pforr and David Weaver
Sustainable Tourism is a ubiquitous term that has accumulated considerable attention and controversy from researchers, policy makers and practitioners. The concept of sustainable tourism emerged in the late 1980s through the assimilation of the sustainable development and tourism development paradigms in the wake of the seminal Brundtland Report (Welford et al. 1999). A growing mainstream awareness of human influences on ecological processes and a realisation that functioning natural systems are needed to support human life contributed to the perceived need for sustainable development. How this awareness and concern should be applied in practice has been a subject of often heated and ongoing local, national and global debate. Not surprisingly, the adoption of sustainable development ideology into the field of tourism also stimulated a multitude of conflicting ideas and perspectives (Hunter 2002).
The idea that human activity can impact on the natural systems and subsequently threaten human prosperity, and even survival, has a long scholarly history. For example, Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1713) wrote about sustainable forestry practices in Germany as a means for continuation of the resource and the survival of local communities. Carlowitz was in turn drawing on the principles of silviculture dating from the sixteenth century (Hasel and Schwartz 2006; Müller 1992). Modern recognition of a need for sustainable living, though without explicitly using this rhetorical frame of reference, gained prominence in mainstream thinking during the 1960s and 1970s. This growing popular awareness was exemplified by publications such as Carson’s (1963) Silent Spring and Erhlich and Erhlich’s (1968) The Population Bomb, both which became best sellers. The Erhlichs’ book was derivative of arguments made almost two centuries earlier by Malthus (1798) on the limited capacity of society to feed a continually growing population. The Erhlichs and Malthus were writing in historical periods of significant social and political change, and Malthus’ work was ground- breaking for his time. However, The Population Bomb had the advantage of international mass print production, international mass media and a generally higher level of education amongst the wider population, arguably making the Erhlichs’ book more readily accessible. The general rediscovery of a need for sustainable development coincided with social and political pressure to take action, especially in the face of high profile environmental disasters publicised by that same international mass media. Infamous environmental ‘firsts’ of that era included the grounding of the oil tanker Torrey Canyon off the UK in 1967, the Three Mile Island partial nuclear meltdown in 1979 and the Union Carbide chemical disaster in Bhopal, India, in 1984.
Institutional recognition of a need for sustainable development manifested in reports such as The Limit to Growth, released by the Club of Rome in 1972. This landmark report recognised that natural resources are limited and overexploitation could have very serious consequences for human society (Meadows et al. 1972). In 1983, the United Nations convened the World Commission on Environment and Development to consider the issues associated with long term economic and social development and its relationship with natural resources. A subsequent report set out to define the parameters of sustainable development (Brundtland 1987), fuelling a considerable amount of debate. Subsequent United Nations sponsored conferences on environment and development through the 1990s and 2000s have attempted, with limited success, to clarify and obtain agreement on how sustainable development translates into policy and practice. The on-going debate about the meaning and application of sustainable development is a product of both ideology and practicality, that is, where the emphasis should be placed with regard to economic, social and environmental imperatives (Hunter 2002).

From sustainable development to sustainable tourism

Based on recognition that tourism was generating significant impacts, the concept of sustainable development sparked the notion of sustainable tourism in the late 1980s even though, notoriously, tourism did not merit a single mention in the seminal Brundtland Report (Hunter 2002; Welford et al. 1999). Sustainable tourism was initially seen as an alternative to dominant ‘mass tourism’. The relationship between these two forms of tourism was conceptualised either as a dichotomy or as opposite ends of a sliding scale (Echtner and Jamal 1997). The assumption underpinning alternative tourism as the flip side of mass tourism was that small numbers of tourists and small- scale development could minimise negative impacts at the local scale (Moscardo et al. 2001; Walpole et al. 2001). This supposition was found to be flawed in that impacts of tourism depend more on the management of development and activities in a given location than the scale and numbers of tourists (Eagles 2002; Oliveira 2003). Negative impacts associated with alternative tourism include intrusion into the local ‘backstage’, reinforcement of the power of the local elite, dependency on external sources of funding, and the initiation or exacerbation of local rivalries (Weaver and Lawton 2013). Subsequently, conceptualisation of sustainable tourism has moved from the idea of an alternative toward a notion that its precepts are relevant to all tourism, regardless of scale and type (Clarke 1997; Weaver and Lawton 1999). This was made explicit in Weaver’s (2000) identification of ‘sustainable mass tourism’ as a legitimate and feasible development alternative.
Despite advances in thinking, there is still an apparently wide gap between theory and practice in sustainable tourism. Mass tourism is still a growing phenomenon with international arrivals surpassing one billion in 2013, on track with the World Tourism Organisation’s enthusiastic predictions for continued growth to 1.6 billion by 2020. Indeed, almost all of the world’s tourism activity can be described as mass tourism. Furthermore, so-called ‘alternative’ tourism remains dependent on the same transportation systems that support mass tourism (Pearce 2000). This trend is expected to continue with the rise of new markets fed by the wealth and aspirations of the growing middle classes in countries such as China and India.
Given the apparent impasse in terms of sustainable tourism theory and practice, recent scholarly research has tended to focus on ideologically aspirational niche alternative tourism initiatives. This focus does not address the broader issues, vagaries and paradoxes that appear to plague the broader notion of sustainable tourism. Focussing on discrete niche areas of alternative tourism such as volunteer tourism and indigenous tourism perhaps enables targeted communication of relevant concepts. However, the overall body of knowledge becomes increasingly siloed, inconsistent and only marginally relevant in terms of implicated tourists and local communities. As such, there is a need for a new and pragmatic analysis of sustainable tourism as an overarching idea and how this manifests in practice. Our book brings together some of the leading established and emerging scholars in this field to put forward their views on sustainable tourism and its inherent paradoxes with a view to move the debate forward as the twenty-first century unfolds.

The paradox

Discussions in the sustainable tourism field tend to focus on a specific approach that presents a definitive and often exclusive pathway or resolution – requiring in turn respective abandonment or adoption of particular tourism practices or ways of thinking. Such an approach emphasises an ‘either–or’ proposition based on the idea of incompatible opposites within tourism. The problem with this approach is that alternative forms of tourism, as outlined earlier, often have their own problems that are apparently unresolvable. Focussing exclusively on alternative tourism also ignores the fact that mass tourism has much benefit to offer through economies of scale that foster innovation and fulfil growing consumer demands. This book offers a means of thinking about tourism that is based on the notion of finding common ground as part of a ‘both-and’ approach. This contrasts with the common ‘either–or’ mentality based on identifying ideas and practices as exclusive choices that purport to solve persistent problems within tourism as a sustainable practice. As part of this approach, the book will examine the strongly apparent tensions within alternative tourism as well as the paradox of continuing growth and other mass tourism- related issues. This is a persistent issue in tourism thinking that has been debated with the aim of finding solutions to the destructive aspects of tourism.
This book presents a unique approach to tourism thinking through the application of dialectics as a means for identifying a resolution to the established paradox between mass tourism, growth and sustainability. Resolution-based dialectics is a useful framework as it focusses on resolving apparently opposing viewpoints by recognising they are not mutually exclusive but have common elements that can be synthesised into rational and practical solutions over time. This method of thinking, which may be summarised as seeking ‘complementarity in contradiction’, tries to overcome dualism by understanding how mass tourism and the various elements of alternative forms of tourism can be synthesised based on their complementarities as a means of achieving the principles of sustainable tourism.

Structure of this book

This book includes 18 chapters with contributions in three parts. Part I, Conceptualising sustainable tourism (Chapters 26), sets the scene in relation to the debate surrounding sustainable tourism. It adopts a conceptual and theoretical perspective presenting a range of views regarding the progression of sustainable tourism and its parental concept of sustainable development. Part I highlights the plurality of approaches, perspectives and critiques that result from an apparent gap between theory and the reality of sustainable tourism practice.
Chapter 2 (Enlightened mass tourism as a ‘third generation’ aspiration for the twenty-first century) by David Weaver details the dialectics approach that guides the book. Weaver outlines how the two traditional models of tourism development, mass tourism on the one hand and alternative tourism on the other, both claim authenticity as pathways to and manifestations of sustainability. However, they are both full of ambiguities and thus hinder the theoretical and practical advancement of sustainable tourism development. Weaver argues that only through their amalgamation into a third generation model, ‘enlightened mass tourism’, will destination sustainability and resilience be facilitated.
Christof Pforr (Chapter 3, Tourism public policy in pursuit of sustainability: discrepancies between rhetoric and reality) employs a chronological perspective of the conceptual evolution of sustainable development and its devolution into the tourism sphere as a backdrop to highlight the current discrepancies in sustainability rhetoric and reality. Analysing implementation efforts in Australia at a national and subnational level, Pforr argues that the challenge is to find a more effective mode of governance to better integrate environmental, economic and social development goals. In this context, interaction, engagement and deliberation are seen as complementary policy instruments that can enhance policymaking processes and ensure more sustainable outcomes.
The gap between sustainability rhetoric and reality is not unique to the tourism field. It is a common thread through many disciplines that also struggle to implement the ideals of sustainability. Michael Hughes and Angus Morrison-Saunders (Chapter 4, Promoting interdisciplinary sustainable tourism) draw on the field of Environmental Impact Assessment to highlight analogies with sustainable tourism development. They argue that more effective sharing of experiences between disciplines and mutual learning is necessary to move the sustainability agenda forward.
In a similar vein, Sanjay K. Nepal, Stephanie Verkoeyen and Tom Karrow (Chapter 5, The end of sustainable tourism? Re-orienting the debate) argue that the sustainable tourism debate has been inwardly focussed. As a result, the field has not given enough consideration to issues of economic growth, globalisation, demographic changes, shifting governance arrangements and political regimes that will impact on future tourism demand. The authors argue that rising future demand for finite resources and the dichotomy between environmental protection and economic progress add a further layer to the sustainability debate that also cannot be ignored.
Richard Butler (Chapter 6, Sustainable tourism – paradoxes, inconsistencies and a way forward?) concludes Part I with his view on the paradoxes and inconsistencies inherent to the sustainability debate and tourism. Butler’s argument puts a spotlight on the extreme difficulties associated with genuine implementation of the sustainable tourism ideal. The chapter also provides an outlook on the future of the debate on sustainable tourism and a possible roadmap for its implementation.
Part II (Destination perspectives, Chapters 713) presents a diverse range of views on how destinations address sustainable tourism. For instance, the challenges faced by small island nations and the climate change reality that confronts coastal and winter tourism destinations. In addition, the emergence of ‘last chance’ tourism destinations and how alternative development philosophies might reinforce implementation efforts of sustainable tourism are discussed.
Jack Carlsen (Chapter 7, Island tourism: systems modelling for sustainability) opens Part II of the book with a focus on small island destinations. He uses a number of case examples to illustrate the challenges of sustainable tourism development in a small island context and the lessons that can be learnt from these. He argues that small island destinations are microcosms of the broader tourism development debate. In particular they can function as m...

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