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Marine ecotourism : issues and experiences / edited by Brian Garrod and Julie C. Wilson.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Aspects of tourism ; 7Publication details: Cleveland : Channel View Publications, c2003.Description: xiii, 266 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 1873150415
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.4791 GAR
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan Moylish Library Main Collection 338.4791 GAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Checked out 17/11/2021 39002100303347

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Marine ecotourism is a major growth area within ecotourism, itself a rapidly expanding area within tourism as a whole. The activity has been attracting increasing attention, both from the popular media and from professionals and academics with an interest in tourism's potential to contribute to sustainable development. However, there is a growing consensus that far too often the term has been used merely as a tool for capitalising on the good intentions of tourists, without the industry itself having to make fundamental changes to their products or to the way they go about their operations. This has often been to the detriment of local environments, economies and host communities. Yet the ideal of ecotourism, as it is properly understood, is to present local communities with a sustainable development alternative - one that works to the benefit of local ecosystems, local economies and local people. The purpose of the first section of this book is therefore to introduce the concept of marine ecotourism and to draw out some of the key issues involved in ensuring that marine ecotourism is developed in a genuinely sustainable manner. The second section then discusses some practical experiences of planning and managing marine ecotourism from around the world, identifying common problems and discussing what might constitute good practice in addressing those problems.

Includes bibliographical references.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • 1 Defining Marine Ecotourism: A Delphi Study
  • 2 Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Dilemmas for Marine Ecotourism
  • 3 Planning Policy Issues for Marine Ecotourism
  • 4 An Assessment of the Framework, Legislation and Monitoring Required to Develop Genuinely Sustainable Whalewatching
  • 5 A Methodology for the Determining the Recreational Carrying Capacity of Wetlands
  • 6 NGOs as Conservation Agents: Achieving Conservation through Marine Ecotourism
  • 7 Sipadan: An Over-exploited Scuba-diving Paradise? An Analysis of Tourist Impact, Diver Satisfaction and Management Priorities
  • 8 Marine Ecotourism through Education: A Case Study of Divers in the British Virgin Islands
  • 9 Reconciling Communities' Expectations of Ecotourism: Initiating a Planning and Education Strategy for the Avoca Beach Rock Platform
  • 10 Community Participation in Marine Ecotourism Development in West Clare, Ireland
  • 11 Marine Ecotourism and Regional Development: A Case Study of the Marine Park Project, Malvan, Maharashtra, India
  • 12 Developing Sustainable Whalewatching in the Shannon Estuary
  • 13 Marine Ecotourism Potential in the Waters of South Devon and Cornwall
  • 14 Scuba Diving: An Alternative Form of Coastal Tourism for Greece?
  • 15 Marine Ecotourism in New Zealand: An Overview of the Industry and its Management
  • Conclusions

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Brian Garrod is Associate Head of the School of Economics at the University of the West of England, Bristol. He lectures in tourism economics, and researches on the interface between ecological economics and sustainable tourism. His work is published in a range of journals and he is co-editor of Managing Visitor Attractions: New Directions (2002). He has twice been consultant to the World Tourism Organization on the subject of sustainable tourism.

Julie C. Wilson is Research Associate in Tourism, also at the University of the West of England, Bristol. Her teaching and research interests include tourism and imagery, tourist behaviour, backpacker travel and ecotourism. She is presently working on projects funded by the Royal Geographical Society, the British Council/NWO Netherlands, and the Royal Society (UK).

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