The geography of tourism and recreation
További szerzők:
Hall, Colin Michael; Page, Stephen J.Cím: The geography of tourism and recreation
Alcím: Environment, place and space
Megjelenési adatok: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, London - New York, 2006. | ISBN: 0-415-33561-2
Megjegyzés: Third edition

Kategóriák: Közgazdaságtudomány, Utazás, turizmus
Tárgyszavak: Turizmus, Idegenforgalom, Gazdaságföldrajz, Tourism
Formátum: OCR szöveg
Típus: könyv
Tárgyszavak: Turizmus, Idegenforgalom, Gazdaságföldrajz, Tourism
Formátum: OCR szöveg
Típus: könyv
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Tartalomjegyzék
Book Cover
Title page
Copyright/impressum
Contents
V-X
List of plates
XI-XIII
List of figures
XV-XVI
List of tables
XVII-XVIII
Acknowledgements
XIX-XX
Permissions
XXI
1. Introduction: Tourism matters!
1-32
Tourism, Recreation, Leisure and Mobility
3-7
The Issue of Scale: Empiricism, Paradigms and Transformations
7-8
Development of the Geography of Tourism and Recreation
8-11
Status of the Geography of Tourism and Recreation
11-12
Knowledge
12-20
Exploration
14
Environmental determinism and possibilism
14-15
The region
15-20
Action: Development of an Applied Geography of Tourism and Recreation
20-24
Culture
24-30
Insight: The geography of tourism and recreation outside the Anglo-American tradition
28-30
Transforming the Geography of Tourism and Recreation
30-32
Questions
32
Reading
32
2. The demand for recreation and tourism
33-91
Geographers and Demand: Historical Perspectives
33-35
The geographers' contribution to demand-based research: an overview
34-35
Recreational Demand
35-41
Maslow's hierarchy model of human needs and recreational and tourist motivation
37-41
Barriers to Recreation
41-43
Seasonality
43-44
Financial Resources and Access to Recreational Opportunity
44-45
Gender and Social Constraints
45-46
The Geography of Fear in Recreation and Leisure Spaces: Gender-based Barriers to Participation
46-50
Case Study: The Geography of Fear and Recreational Participation Implications for Exclusion
47-50
The Geography of Fear and Urban Park Use in Leicester
48-50
Summary Points
50
Social Exclusion: Conditioning Leisure Participation
50-52
Resources and Fashions
52-53
Walking as a Leisure Pursuit: A Function of Resources and Fashion
53-57
Case Study: Myles Dunphy and the Australian Bushwalking Movement
54-57
Measuring Recreational Demand
57
Problems and Methods of Measuring Recreational Demand
57-58
Time Budget Survey Techniques
58-60
Leisure time budgets
58
Tourism time budgets
58-59
UK 2000 Time Use Survey
59-60
National Evaluations of Recreational Demand: International Perspectives
61-64
United Kingdom
61-62
United States
62-63
Poland
63-64
Regional Demand for Leisure and Recreation in London
64-65
Spatial Analysis of Demand at the Micro Level: Site Surveys
65-67
Tourism Demand
67
What is Tourism Demand?
68
Tourist Motivation
68-70
Maslow’s Hierarchy Model and Tourist Motivation
70-73
Measurement of Tourism Demand: Tourism Statistics
73-75
Defining Tourism
75-76
Technical Definitions of Tourism
76-78
Domestic Tourism Statistics
79-80
International Tourism Statistics
81-82
Methodological Issues
82-84
Patterns of Tourism: International Perspectives
84
Patterns of Global Tourism
84-86
Future trends in the geography of international tourism to 2020
85-86
Patterns of Domestic Tourism
86-87
New Zealand Domestic Tourism Survey
87-88
Scale and significance of New Zealand domestic travel
87-88
Patterns and spatial economic effects of domestic travel in New Zealand
88
Conclusions
88-90
Questions
90
Reading
90-91
3. The supply of recreation and tourism
92-143
The Supply Factor in Recreation
92-93
How has the Geographer Approached the Analysis of Recreational Supply Issues?
93-97
Insight: Local Authority Expenditure on Leisure and Recreation Provision - Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council
95-96
Descriptive Research on Location and Travel
97-99
Explanatory Research on Location and Travel
99-100
Predictive Research on Location
100-101
Normative Research on Location
101-102
Supply and Demand in Recreational Contexts: Spatial Interactions
102-105
Classifying recreational resources
104
Recreational resources and the urban fringe
104-105
The Green Belt Concept
105-108
Insight: Country Parks as a Spatial Recreational Tool: Intercepting Urban Recreationalists Seeking the Countryside
106-107
Multiple Use of Recreational Resources
109
The Supply of Tourism
109-114
Insight: The Destination Life Cycle
112-114
Towards a Critical Geography of Tourism Production
114-119
Insight: Economic Globalisation
118-119
International Hotel Chains
120-122
The Leisure Product
123
Role of the Public and Private Sector in Tourism Supply
123-127
The private sector
125
The public sector
125-127
Spatial Analytical Approaches to the Supply of Tourism Facilities
127-132
The tourism business district
127-130
Tourism attractions
130-132
Tourist Facilities
132-142
Accommodation
132-135
Catering facilities
135-138
Insight: Towards Geographical Analyses of Hospitality: Research Agendas
137-138
Tourist shopping
138-141
Conditional elements
141-142
Conclusion
142
Questions
142-143
Reading
143
4. The impacts of tourism and recreations
144-171
Impacts: Recreation Resource Management
144-147
Carrying Capacity
147-150
Insight: The Recreation Opportunity Spectrum
149-150
The Limits of Acceptable Change
150-154
Insight: The Tourism Optimisation Management Model (TOMM)
151-154
Economic Analysis
154-158
Insight: The Economic Impact of Events
158
Analysis of Tourism’s Social Impacts
158-164
Insight: Trafficking, Sex Tourism and Slavery
163-164
Physical Environmental Impacts
164-170
Conclusion
170
Questions
170
Reading
170-171
5. Urban recreation and tourism
172-222
Insight: Stanley Park, Vancouver
173
Geographical Approaches to Urban Recreation
174
Evolution of Urban Recreation in Britain
174-175
Phase 1: foundation
174-175
Phase 2: consolidation
175
Phase 3: expansion
175
Urban Recreation: A Socio-geographic Perspective
175-177
The 1800s
177
The 1840s
177-178
The 1880s
178
The 1920s
178
The 1960s and Beyond
178-185
Case Study: The Evolution of Parks and Open Space in Victorian Leicester
180-185
Park Development in Victorian Leicester
181
Post-Victorian Park Development
181-185
Summary Points
185
Methods of Analysing Urban Recreation
185-188
Urban Recreational Planning
188-189
Open Space Planning: Spatial Principles
189-196
Case Study: The Management, Planning and Provision of Parks and Open Space in the London Borough of Newham
192-196
Urban Park and Open Space Provision in London
193
The London Borough of Newham
194-196
Summary Points
196
Urban Tourism
196-197
Understanding the Neglect of Urban Tourism by Researchers
197-198
Approaches to Urban Tourism: Geographical Analysis
198-202
Interpreting urban tourism: form concepts to theoretically informed analysis
199-202
The Tourist Experience of Urban Tourism
202-204
Insight: Tourism in Capital Cities
203-204
The Urban Tourism Market: Data Sources
205-206
Urban Tourism: Behavioural Issues
206-208
Tourist Perception and Cognition of the Urban Environment
208-212
Tourism Cognitive Mapping
212-215
Insight: The Value of Urban Heritage Resources
213-215
Service Quality Issues in Urban Tourism
216-217
Significance of Urban Tourism
217-221
Conclusion
221
Questions
221-222
Reading
222
6. Rural recreation and tourism
223-252
In Pursuit of the Concept of ‘Rural’
224-226
Conceptualising the Rural Recreation-Tourism Dichotomy
226-227
The Geographer’s Contribution to Theoretical Debate in Rural Contexts
227-230
Towards a Concept of Rural Tourism
230
What Makes Rural Tourism Distinctive?
230-232
Rural Recreation and Tourism in Historical Perspective
232-233
The Geographer’s Approach to Rural Recreation and Tourism
233
Studies of Demand
233-236
Site studies
235
Carrying capacity
235-236
Supply of Rural Recreation
236-237
Impact of Rural Recreation
237-240
Insight: Second Homes in the Countryside
238-240
Rural Tourism: Spatial Analytical Approaches
241
Impact of Rural Tourism
241-242
Economic Impact
242-244
Farm tourism
243-244
Environmental Effects of Rural Tourism
244-249
Insight: Wine, Food and Tourism
244-249
Recreation, Tourism and Sustainability
250-251
Conclusion
251-252
Questions
252
Reading
252
7. Tourism and recreation in the pleasure periphery. Wilderness and National Parks
253-290
The Changing Meaning of Wilderness in Western Society
253-262
Insight: What is the effect of World Heritage listing?
261-262
Environmental History of National Parks and Wilderness Areas
262-263
The Value of Wilderness
263-269
Insight: National Parks and Indigenous Peoples
267-269
Identifying Wilderness
269-278
Case Study: Wilderness Inventory in Australia
269-278
Wilderness Inventories
270-277
From Identification to Preservation
277-278
Summary Points
278
Tourist and Recreational Demand for Wilderness, National Parks and Natural Areas
278-284
Supplying the Wilderness and Outdoor Recreation Experience
284-289
Insight: Peripheral Areas, Wilderness and Global Environmental Change
288-289
Conclusion
290
Questions
290
Reading
290
8. Coastal and marine recreation and tourism
291-314
Coastline as a Recreation and Tourist Resource: Its Discovery and Recognition as a Leisure Resource
292-296
The Geographer’s Contribution to the Analysis of Coastal Recreation and Tourism
296-298
Historical Analysis of Recreation and Tourism in the Coastal Zone
298-300
Insight: Promotion of the Seaside Resort: Place-Promotion Strategies
298-300
Models of Coastal Recreation and Tourism
300-302
Tourist and Recreational Travel to the Coast
302-303
Tourist and Recreational Behaviour: Use and Activity Patterns in Coastal Environments
303-307
Environmental Perspectives on Coastal Recreation and Tourism
307-309
Integrated Coastal Zone Management
309-312
Insight: Cruise Tourism
311-312
Conclusion
312-314
Questions
314
Reading
314
9. Tourism and recreation planning and policy
315-342
Recreation Planning Policy
315
The Evolution of Leisure and Recreation Planning
315-316
Recreation Planning: The Concern with Space and Place
316-319
Tourism Planning and Policy
319-320
What is Tourism Planning?
320-322
Approaches to Tourism Planning
322-326
Co-operative and Integrated Control Systems
327-329
Insight: The Changing Role of Government and Sustainability
328-329
Development of Industry Co-ordination Mechanisms
329-330
Raising Consumer Awareness
330
Raising Producer Awareness
330-331
Insight: International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO)
331
Strategic Planning to Supersede Conventional Approaches
331-334
Insight: Singapore: Tourism 21
333-334
Tourism Policy
334-340
Conclusion
340-341
Questions
341
Reading
341
10. The future
342-357
Geography - The Discipline: Direction and Progress
343-344
Revisiting Applied Geography
344-346
Contributions
347-349
The Role of GIS and Tourism: A Tool for Applied Geographic Research
349-351
The Role of the Geographer in the New Millennium: Whither Tourism and Recreation?
351-355
Insight: The Future - The Ageing Population
354-355
Transformations?
355-356
Questions
356-357
Reading
357
Bibliography
359-422
Index
424-427
Rear book cover