1st Edition
Political Economy of Tourism A Critical Perspective
1. Re-introducing Tourism to Political Economy Jan Mosedale Part 1: Approaches to Political Economy in Tourism 2. Tourism, Capitalism and Marxist Political Economy Raoul V. Bianchi 3. Regulation Theory and its Evolution and Limitations in Tourism Studies Scarlett Cornelissen 4. The Paradigms of Political Economy and Tourism Policy: NTOs and State Policy Craig Webster, Stanislav Ivanov and Steven F. Illum 5. Global Commodity Chains and Tourism: Past Research and Future Directions Michael Clancy 6. Thinking outside the box: Alternative Political Economies in Tourism Jan Mosedale Part 2: Tourism and Key Themes of Political Economy 7. Yes, Virginia: There is a Tourism Class: Why Class Still Matters in Tourism Analysis C. Michael Hall 8. Gender and Tourism: Gender, Age and Mountain Tourism in Japan Janet Momsen and Michihiko Nakata 9. The Political Economy of Temporary Migration: Seasonal Workers, Tourists and Sustaining New Zealand’s Labour Force Kirsten Lovelock and Teresa Leopol 10. Changing Power Relations: Foreign Direct Investment in Zanzibar Dorothea Meyer 11. Dubai: ‘An Exotic Destination with a Cosmopolitan Lifestyle.’ Kevin Meethan Part 3: Tourism and Spatial Contexts of Political Economy 12. Negotiating Business Interests and a Community's ‘Greater Good’: Community-based Tourism Planning and Stakeholder Involvement in the Catlins, New Zealand Julia N. Albrecht 13. Tourism, Neoliberal Policy and Competitiveness in the Developing World: The Case of the Master Plan for Marrakech Nicolai Scherle 14. The Political Economy of Trade in International Air Transport Services David Timothy Duval and John Macilree 15. Tourism Regulation and Relational Geography: The Global, Local and Everything in Between Jan Mosedale and Julia N. Albrecht
Biography
Jan Mosedale is Senior Lecturer in Tourism and Hospitality at the University of Sunderland, UK. He is primarily concerned with analysing the constitution of ‘the economy’ as multiple forms of economic practices across space. This involves research on the capitalist structures of the economy as well as non-capitalist forms of economic exchanges.






