The volume looks at issues of in/ justices in tourism destination management and governance. This book sheds light on theoretical and practical perspectives and illustrates ways in which tourism practices cause or perpetuate inequities and injustices on people, animals, and the environments of destinations. By doing so, the book offers further insight into who benefits from tourism, how tourism can be made fairer and more just, and at the more extreme end, how tourism can be mobilised as a tool for securing justice.
This significant book is a must-read for academics, researchers, and students interested in tourism governance and destination management.
Pooneh Torabian is a lecturer at the Department of Tourism, Otago Business School, University of Otago, New Zealand. She has a PhD in recreation and leisure studies from the University of Waterloo, Canada. Pooneh uses an interdisciplinary lens to study how intersections of identities such as gender, class, and race shape international mobilities. She is interested in the notions of dual citizenship and freedom of movement and their implications for crossing international borders. More recently, she has started research projects where she explores how arts can help the marginalised communities with resettlement, home-making, and integration.
Julia N. Albrecht is an associate professor at the Department of Tourism, Otago Business School, University of Otago, New Zealand. With her academic background in geography and landscape ecology, political studies, and tourism, Julia is interested in tourism and destination management for sustainable tourism, tourism strategy and planning, visitor management, and nature-based tourism. Julia publishes her work in leading academic journals such as the Journal of Sustainable Tourism, Tourism Management, and Annals of Tourism Research, among others. She is a co-editor of the Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism and she serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research.