1st Edition

Community-Based Tourism in the Developing World Community Learning, Development & Enterprise

By Peter Wiltshier, Alan Clarke Copyright 2020
    240 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    238 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book analyses community-based approaches to developing and regenerating tourism destinations in the developing world, addressing this central issue in sustainable tourism practices.

    It reviews a variety of systems useful for analysing and understanding management issues to offer new insight into the skills and resources that are needed for implementation, ongoing monitoring and review of community-based tourism. Adopting a multidisciplinary approach, this book explores alternatives to the dominant interpretation which argues against tourism as a benefit for community development. International case studies throughout the book illustrate and vouch for tourism as a transformative force while clarifying the need to manage expectations in sustainable tourism for community development, rejuvenation and regeneration. Emphasis is placed on accruing relevant decision-support material, and creating services, products and management approaches that will endure and adapt as change necessitates.

    This will be of great interest to upper-level students, researchers and academics in the fields of tourism impacts, sustainability, ethics and development as well as the broader field of geography.

    1 Principles and practices: case studies in innovation

    ALAN CLARKE AND PETER WILTSHIER

    2 A benchmarked step-by-step community-based tourism (CBT) toolkit for developing countries

    VIKNESWARAN NAIR AND AMRAN HAMZAH

    3 Systems approach to community-based tourism

    TADEJA JERE JAKULIN

    4 A Responsible CBT approach

    LELOKWANE LOCKIE MOKGALO AND GWINYAI MERCY MUSIKAVANHU

    5 Community-based festivals in the context of community-based tourism

    ALAN CLARKE AND ALLAN JEPSON

    6 Rethinking tourism in Belarus: the opening of a rural economy

    SUSAN L. SLOCUM AND VALERIA KLITSOUNOVA

    7 The importance of information and communication technology for dissemination, commercialization and local protagonism in community-based tourism initiatives: a case study of CBT in Castelhanos, Ilhabela, Brazil

    DANIELLA S. MARCONDES

    8 Community-based tourism: planning processes and outcomes in the developing world

    ADENIKE ADEBAYO, PETER ROBINSON AND ADE ORIADE

    9 ‘Meet the locals’: community tourism – an approach to combat over-tourism in Malta and Gozo

    ANDREW JONES AND JULIAN ZARB

    10 Reviewing the background to success in communities developing tourism: an evaluation through participant observations

    PETER WILTSHIER

    11 The path: from agricultural country to popular travel destination

    AKMAL RAKHMANOV AND NUTFILLO IBRAGIMOV

    12 Community-based tourism: the Romeiros Way in São Miguel Island in Azores/Portugal

    VITOR AMBRÓSIO

    13 Community based tourism – the kiwi variation

    PETER WILTSHIER

    14 Community-based tourism engagement and wellbeing from a learning perspective

    GIOVANNA BERTELLA, SABRINA TOMASI, ALESSIO CAVICCHI AND GIGLIOLA PAVIOTTI

    15 Systems, stakeholders, storytelling: tourism development and conservation in the Peak District and the Balaton Highlands National Parks

    PETER WILTSHIER AND ALAN CLARKE

    Biography

    Peter Wiltshier has a PhD which explored responsible development of tourism in a creative and dedicated fashion; creatively supporting communities to provide resources for their welfare and dedicated to the pursuit of a responsible future with a focus on the beautiful and important ‘Green Lungs’ of rural Britain in the East Midlands and in New Zealand. His role as senior lecturer destination and community tourism management at the University of Derby Buxton is to ensure that the public and private sector work together to develop resources and skills for communities to take charge of their own destinies. He also works with the Diocese of Derby to identify how tourism can benefit churches. He supports the county, the district and parishes within Derbyshire and the Peak District in their endeavors to create a better environment for all through purposeful leisure and recreation.

    Alan Clarke, is employed at the University of Pannonia in Hungary, where he has been appointed as a full Hungarian professor. His commitment to communities has been marked throughout his career, beginning with his teaching in community education in Sheffield, followed by time with the community education team at the Open University. He has led research in the inner city of Salford and worked with the Roma community in the North West of England. He has been known to say that the best chapter in his PhD was the one on community development (which never appeared). The Derby Jubilee Community Festival crystalised a number of issues – power, hegemony, inclusion, engagement and capacity building – plus the opportunity to develop a lifelong friendship with Allan Jepson. Alan moved to Hungary where communities and festivals are constructed differently. There were hard lessons in coming to terms with this – cultures, structures and stakeholder relations have to be seen through differently sensitised lenses. This opened up an interest with religious and heritage tourism and the ways these belief systems impacted on the cultures in which they are experienced in the communities that give them life. It was here that he made the significant bond with his co-editor, Peter Wiltshier.