Channel View Publications
Tourism, Recreation and Climate Change
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Edited by:
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About this book
This is the first comprehensive book-level examination of the relationship between tourism and climate change, of interest not only to students of tourism but to policy makers and the industry who will have to respond to the challenges posed.
Author / Editor information
Michael Hall is Professor in the School of Business, University of Canterbury, New Zealand; Docent, Department of Geography, University of Oulu, Finland and a Visiting Professor, School of Business and Economics, Linnaeus University, Kalmar, Sweden. He has published widely on tourism, regional development, and environmental change.
Higham James :James Higham is Professor at the University of Otago, New Zealand and Visiting Professor at the University of Stavanger, Norway. He is co-editor of the Journal of Sustainable Tourism.
Colin Michael Hall is PhD from the University of Western Australia and previous positions at the University of Canberra, University of New England, Massey University and the University of Otago. Currently co-editor of Current Issues in Tourism and Professor, University of Canterbury; Docent, University of Oulu; Visiting Professor, Linnaeus University; and Senior Research Fellow, University of Johannesburg.
James Higham holds the position of Professor of Tourism, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, and Visiting Professor of Sustainable Tourism, University of Stavanger, Norway. His research is situated in the broad field of tourism and global environmental change, which in recent years has focused on climate change, tourist behaviour and transitions to a low-carbon future.
Reviews
This text draws on a wealth of relevant contributors and explores the complex inter-relationships between tourism and climate change in a thoughtful, yet gratifyingly accessible manner.
Climate change is arguably the most significant global environmental issue of this century. Among its wide-ranging impacts are the effects on the character and quality of tourism resources. Hall and Higham (Univ. of Otago, New Zealand) provide a timely assessment of the state of knowledge on this topic… this book is a significant contribution to the literature and will be a key reference for tourism researchers, policy makers, and practitioners. It is suitable for graduate-level and possibly senior-level undergraduate courses. Y.-F. Leung, North Carolina State University
This book is a must read for anyone with a long-term mindset about the management of tourism, since it is the first to examine in depth the effects of climate change on this sector and to consider how stakeholders should be responding. Dr. David B. Weaver, Professor of Tourism & Events Management School of Recreation, Health, and Tourism
It is encouraging to see a scholarly contribution concerning climate change and tourism especially at a time when too many in the tourism industry and academic community appear either sceptical or indifferent to the world about them. The editors are to be congratulated for assembling a wide range of tourism topics in which climate plays a part, written by some of the most competent contributors in the field. This book should be a must-have on the reading list of every tourism course as well as in every department and institutional library. Bryan Farrell, University of California, in Tourismos Volume 1, Number 1 This edited volume covers every aspect of the relationship between tourism and climate change, and the state of the art in this field. This book provides a good introduction to the current state of research on tourism and climate change.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Contributors
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Preface
xi - Part 1: Context
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Chapter 1. Introduction: Tourism, Recreation and Climate Change
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Chapter 2. The Climate–Tourism Relationship and its Relevance to Climate Change Impact Assessment
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Chapter 3. The Evolution of the Climate Change Issue in the Tourism Sector
44 - Part 2: The Effects of Climate Change on Tourist Flows and Recreation Patterns
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Chapter 4. Climate and Policy Changes: Their Implications for International Tourism Flows
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Chapter 5. The Mediterranean: How Can the World’s Most Popular and Successful Tourist Destination Adapt to a Changing Climate?
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Chapter 6. Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Tourism under the Light of Equity Issues
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Chapter 7. Climate Change and Tourism and Recreation in North America: Exploring Regional Risks and Opportunities
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Chapter 8. Nature Tourism and Climatic Change in Southern Africa
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Chapter 9. Changing Snow Cover and Winter Tourism and Recreation in the Scottish Highlands
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Chapter 10. Climate Change and Tourism in the Swiss Alps
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Chapter 11. Effects of Climate Change on Tourism Demand and Benefits in Alpine Areas
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Chapter 12. Implications of Climate Change on Tourism in Oceania
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Chapter 13. Tourism, Fossil Fuel Consumption and the Impact on the Global Climate
192 - Part 3: Adaptation and Response: Managing the Relationship Between Tourism, Recreation and Global Climate Change
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Chapter 14. Tourism and Climate Change Adaptation: The Norwegian Case
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Chapter 15. Tourism and the Ozone Hole: Varying Perceptions
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Chapter 16. ‘Everyone Talks About the Weather . . .’
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Chapter 17. Climate Change, Leisure-related Tourism and Global Transport
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Chapter 18. Sustainable Mobility and Sustainable Tourism
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Chapter 19. Tourism as Victim, Problem or Solution: Story Lines of a Complex Industry–Environment Relation
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Chapter 20.Tourism’s Contribution to Global Environmental Change: Space, Energy, Disease, Water
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Chapter 21. Making Tourism Sustainable: The Real Challenge of Climate Change?
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Index
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