1st Edition

Interdisciplinary Research and Tourism

Edited By Jun Wen, Metin Kozak, Joshua Aston, Wei Wang Copyright 2026
200 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

200 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This significant book sheds light on the possibilities and importance of undertaking interdisciplinary research between tourism and adjacent disciplines in order to further promote the values and contributions of tourism research in both academia and society. The book critically explores the nexus between interdisciplinary research and tourism while also unpacking methods of tourism education... Read more

Lists of figures

List of tables

About the editors

List of contributors

 

Introduction

Interdisciplinary Research in Tourism: An overview

Jun Wen, Metin Kozak, Joshua Aston and Wei Wang 

 

1 Tourism and other disciplines: Shall we dance?

Elisa Zentveld

 

2 Disciplinarity and the solo researcher: Making strategic choices

Michael Fagence

 

3 Interdisciplinarity of tourism studies: Methodological profiles of doctoral dissertations

Wiesław Alejziak and Bartosz Szczechowicz

 

4 The Silk Road Initiative: An interdisciplinary approach from tourism politics to stakeholder management

Saeid Nosrati and Levent Altinay

 

5 Academic Freedom: You can discuss any flavour you like, as long as it is vanilla

Elisa Zentveld and Mark Myers

 

6 Academic freedom in the tourism and hospitality literature: A review and call for action

Jun Wen, Metin Kozak and Fangli Hu

 

7 Senior leisure tourists’ learning path: The perspective of Transformative Learning Theory

Fangzhou Wan, Zhuo Li and Yubin Xi

 

8 Formation and reconstruction of professional identities: A lecturer’s autoethnography

Qin Zhang

 

9 International students' decisions to study abroad: Empirical evidence from South Korea

Amare Wondirad and Lisa Marie Assante 

 

10 Gender tourism: An interdisciplinary perspective

Vorakarn Chalermchaikit and Metin Kozak

 

11 Interdisciplinarity benefits: The advantages of tourism considered as a culture

Hugo Capellà-Miternique

 

12 To go or not to go: A comprehensive framework on suboptimal health status and travel avoidance

Shaohua Yang

 

13 Positive Psychology and Tourist Wellbeing: Reflections through a Developmental Lens

Lu Changa, Sebastian Filep, Brent Moyle, Sera Vada and Karine Dupre

 

14 Specify travel therapy for people with suboptimal health status: An interdisciplinary perspective

Yedan Fan

 

15 The Relationship Between Adolescent Mental Health and Tourism Experience

Jialu You

 

Index

Biography

Jun Wen is an associate professor of Tourism and Health Sciences at the School of Hospitality and Tourism Management, Macau University of Science and Technology (MUST), Macau SAR, China.

Metin Kozak is a professor of Marketing at the Department of Advertising, School of Communication, Kadir Has University, Istanbul, Türkiye.

Joshua Aston is a professor and associate dean (law) in the School of Business and Law at Edith Cowan University, Australia.

Wei Wang is a professor in Public Health at the School of Medical and Health Sciences at Edith Cowan University, Australia.

"As scholars continue to wrangle with epistemological aspects of the study of tourism, the authors of this book offer an eclectic, novel, and insightful set of contributions to this debate. In doing so they illustrate the challenges and possibilities of interdisciplinary research in an engaging and persuasive way which will surely influence the development of the field."

John Tribe, York St John University, UK

"When multidisciplinarity appears to act as a “bottleneck” for the integration and enhancement of tourism research and scholarship, interdisciplinarity has come to the call. This book puts together a collection of fresh perspectives on, and innovative approaches to, understanding the complexities and challenges associated with tourism. It is a must-read for academics and research students working in this evolving and expanding field."

Honggen Xiao, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR, CN

"At a time when so many tourism scholars continue within their disciplinary silos, this book is a welcome addition to any collection of works on tourism research, because it illustrates precisely why tourism must be treated as an interdisciplinary subject. This tome is chock full of empirical illustrations of interdisciplinarity and brings to light new ways of thinking about tourism research from a multitude of diverse perspectives."

Dallen J. Timothy, Arizona State University, US