Saluting while the ship sinks: the necessity for tourism paradigm change |
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Authors: | Larry Dwyer |
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Institution: | 1. Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia;2. Griffith Institute for Tourism (GIFT), Griffith University, Nathan, Australia;3. School of Marketing, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | The established mindset underpinning tourism planning, development and research is under attack from many quarters on the grounds that “business as usual” seems impossible to reconcile with sustainability. The paper first highlights key characteristics of the prevailing paradigm associated with tourism industry expansion globally. It then identifies common elements of an alternative “sustainable futures” paradigm, contrasting its features with those of the established paradigm in relation to seven fundamental elements: neo-liberalism, anthropocentrism, shareholder orientation, growth, price, space and promotion. Next, the paper identifies the implications of the alternative paradigm in terms of the underpinning mindset (attitudes and behaviours) of major tourism stakeholders. Pathways to facilitate the transition to the new sustainable futures’ paradigm are identified. The paper concludes with reflections on the power of the new paradigm, and its implications for a global sustainable tourism research and action agenda. |
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Keywords: | Sustainable development paradigm change tourism stakeholder policy-making neo-liberalism political economy |
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