1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of Tea Tourism

362 Pages 47 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

362 Pages 47 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

362 Pages 47 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Routledge Handbook of Tea Tourism provides comprehensive and cutting-edge insights into global tea tourism. With contributions from leading scholars and experts across 19 countries, it demonstrates the interdisciplinary nature and breadth of topics associated with global tea tourism. Tea is deeply connected to tourism through both travel and consumption. For host communities it provides... Read more

List of Contributors

List of Boxes

List of Figures

List of Tables

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Lee Jolliffe and MSM Aslam

PART I

Foundations of tea tourism

  1. Ancient origins of tea tourism
  2. Libo Yan and Kunbing Xiao

  3. Tea tourism and route heritage: Nakeli village on China's Ancient Tea Horse Road
  4. Gary Sigley

  5. Tea and spiritual travel: Panchen Tuo tea
  6. Li Jianming, Min (Lucy) Zhang and Yanting Gu

  7. Wild tea and indigenous tourism: a case from Vietnam
  8. Cuong Duc Hoa Nguyen and Mai Chi Nguyen

  9. The heritage railway and tea tourism: The case of Senzu, Japan
  10. Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang, Akari Takeguchi, Kohei Nagaoka and Koichi Kimura

  11. Cultural heritage and tourism: Friesland tea
  12. Lysbeth Vink, Annette Kappert and Hartwig Bohne

  13. Recognition of the cultural heritage of tea: An international perspective
  14. Hilary du Cros

  15. Teaics as a knowledge resource for tea tourism
  16. Brian Park

  17. Tea tourism in the global south: An African perspective
  18. Lebogang Matholwane Mathole, Unathi Sonwabile Henama, Lehlohonolo Gibson Mokoena and Madiseng Messiah Phori

    PART II

    Sustainability in tea tourism

  19. Integrated management of community-based tea tourism: Value through symbiosis
  20. Bussaba Sitikarn, Athitaya Pathan, and Kannapat Kankaew

  21. Tea community culture and tourism: The case of Turkey
  22. Kadir Çetin and Emre Erbaş

  23. Hospitality and tea: Taking tea culture to the next level
  24. J.A.R.C. Sandaruwani, G.V.H. Dinusha and R.S.S.W. Arachchi

  25. Homestay in small tea gardens: The case of Meghalaya, India
  26. Evarisa M. Nengnong and Saurabh Kumar Dixit

  27. Line rooms: An authentic approach to heritage tea tourism
  28. G.V.H. Dinusha, J.A.R.C. Sandaruwani and R.S.S.W. Arachchi

  29. Employment issues in tea tourism: A way forward
  30. P. Gayathri, D.A.C. Suranga Silva, Krishantha Ganeshan, Bhagya Erathna, Yasas

    Kulasekara and Theeshakya Weerakotuwa

    Part III

    Management and marketing of tea tourism

  31. Service quality in an English tea room: A picture is worth a thousand words
  32. Belinda Davenport

  33. Tea factory tourism experiences: Pearl milk tea in Taiwan
  34. Nikki Wu and Li-Hsin Chen

  35. Facilitating tea stories on Instagram during the COVID-19 pandemic
  36. Joan Pan and Wayne Buente

  37. Cultivating sense of place: Sabah tea experience in Malaysian Borneo
  38. Balvinder Kler and Paulin Wong

  39. Perceptions of tea tourism value and its impact on destination attractiveness
  40. J.P.R.C. Ranasinghe, A.C.I.D Karunarathna, U.G.O. Sammani, H.M.J.P. Herath and P.G.S.S. Pattiyagedara

  41. Revitalizing a region using tea tourism: The case of Umegashima, Japan
  42. Masako Saito

  43. Linking tea, tourism, and community using Porter’s Diamond model
  44. Imali N. Fernando

  45. Marketing Green Tea Tourism Destinations
  46. Kunihiko Iwasaki and Amnaj Khaokhrueamaung

    PART IV

    Innovation and practice in tea tourism

  47. Gastronomy and tea tourism: Tea-oriented gastronomy tours in Rize, Turkey
  48. Gulsun Yildirim

  49. International exchanges and gastronomical tea tourism
  50. Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang, Piyaporn Chueamchaitrakun, and Kazuyoshi Nakakoji

  51. Tea cafés and community diversification
  52. Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang, Hiruna Yagi, Mutsumi Yokota, and Sousuke Goto

  53. Tea tourism promotion in Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS)
  54. Kyoko Ishigami and Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang

  55. Exploring the value creation process in the Japanese black tea market and tourism
  56. Risa Takano, Daisuke Kanama, and Naoko Yamada

  57. Tea tourism and tea tour guiding: The case of Iran
  58. Harima Zamani-Farahani

    PART V

    Resilience in tea tourism

  59. Resilience through tea tourism: a tea region case from India
  60. Sujama Roy

  61. Human wildlife interactions in tea tourism: the Dooars in India
  62. Chandan Datta

  63. A resilient tea destination: the Azores archipelago

Jose Soares de Albergaria Ferreira Pinto

Epilogue

Li-Hsin Chen and Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang

Biography

Lee Jolliffe is visiting professor at Ulster University, UK. She has written extensively on heritage tourism topics including tea tourism through her 2007 edited book, Tea and Tourism: Tourists, Transitions and Transformations. In researching tea and tourism she has visited tea gardens and estates in many countries, completing a Japanese Tea Master Course in Japan and the World Tea Tours Darjeeling Immersion program in India.

M.S.M. Aslam is professor in tourism management, Department of Tourism Management at Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka, and Editor in Chief, Asian Journal of Management Studies. He has carried out research on tea and tourism from different perspectives published individually and jointly in international journals and conference proceedings. He initiated and is working with Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka to establish the International Tea Tourism Institute (ITTI). He works with public and private organizations to develop tea tourism in Sri Lanka.

Amnaj Khaokhrueamuang is an associate professor in tourism at the School of Management and Information, University of Shizuoka, Japan. His research interest focuses on rural tourism-related issues associated with community development, agricultural extension, culture and heritage. Tea tourism is one of his research focuses, particularly in the international exchange of tea-related business between Japan and Thailand, which expects to provide the lessons learned to global tea industry communities.

Li-Hsin Chen is an assistant professor, International Masters' Program of Tourism and Hospitality, National Kaohsiung University of Hospitality and Tourism. She is Associate Editor of the Journal of Responsible Tourism Management and also serves as editorial board member for other journals in tourism and hospitality. Her research interests include coffee and tea tourism, bicycle tourism, dual attitudes model, indirect measurement, experiencescapes, service design and multisensory marketing.