Section 1: Introduction 1: Introduction: Mass Tourism in a Small World Section 2: Theoretical Approaches to Mass Tourism 2: Mass Tourism Does Not Need Defending 3: The Morality of Mass Tourism 4: The Political Economy of Mass Tourism and its Contradictions 5: A Theoretical Approach to Mass Tourism in Italy 6: Sustainability and Mass Tourism: A Contradiction in Terms? 7: Mass Tourism and the Environment: Issues and Dilemmas Section 3: Historical Studies of Tourism Development 8: The Dynamics of Tourism Development in Britain: The Profit Motive and that ‘Curious’ Alliance of Private Capital and the Local State 9: From Holiday Camps to the All-inclusive: the ‘Butlinization’ of Tourism 10: Decline Beside the Seaside: British Seaside Resorts and Declinism 11: Mass Tourism and the US National Park Service System 12: Transport and Tourism: The Perpetual Link Section 4: Case Studies in Modern Mass Tourism 13: Mass Tourism and China 14: Mass Tourism in Thailand: The Chinese and Russians 15: Mass Tourism in Bulgaria: The Force Awakens 16: Mass Tourism in Mallorca: Examples from Calivià 17: Tunisia: Mass Tourism in Crisis? 18: From Blue to Grey? Malta’s Quest from Mass Beach to Niche Heritage Tourism 19: Cruise Ship Tourism in the Caribbean: The Mess of Mass Tourism Section 5: The Future 20: Conclusion: Mass Tourism in the Future
Suitable for researchers and students within tourism related studies
David Harrison (Edited By)
David Harrison has been Professor of Tourism at Middlesex
University since 2014. Before then, he was Professor of Tourism at
the University of the South Pacific (1996-1998 and 2008 to 2014)
and similarly at London Metropolitan University (1998-2008). Since
1987, his research has concentrated on tourism in deveioping
societies. He is is author of The Sociology of Modernisation and
Development, (Routledge, 1988), and editor of numerous texts on
tourism, including: Tourism and the Less Developed Countries,
(Belhaven,1992). Pacific Island Tourism (Cognizant 2003), The
Politics of World Heritage ( with Michael Hitchcock, Channel View,
2005), Tourism and the Less Developed World, (cab International
(l2001). More recently, he has edited Tourism in Pacific Islands
(with Stephen Pratt, Routledge, 2015) and, with Richard Sharpley,
Mass Tourism in a Small World (CAB International, 2017)
Richard Sharpley (Edited By)
Richard Sharpley is Professor of Tourism and Development at the
University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK. He has previously
held positions at a number of other institutions, including the
University of Northumbria (Reader in Tourism) and the University of
Lincoln, where he was professor of Tourism and Head of Department,
Tourism and Recreation Management. He is co-editor of the journal
Tourism Planning & Development, a resource editor for Annals of
Tourism Research and a member of the editorial boards of a number
of other tourism journals. His principal research interests are
within the fields of tourism and development, island tourism, rural
tourism and the sociology of tourism and his books include Tourism
and Development: Concepts and Issues (2002, with David Telfer)
Tourism and Development in the Developing World (2008, with David
Telfer), Tourism, Tourists and Society, 4th Edition (2008); The
Darker Side of Travel; The Theory and Practice of Dark Tourism
(2009, with Philip Stone); Tourism, Development and Environment:
Beyond Sustainability (2009); and Tourist Experience: Contemporary
Perspectives (2011, with Philip Stone). A further collection on
tourist experiences, The Contemporary Tourist Experience: Concepts
& Consequences, was published in 2012, and a second edition of
Tourism and Development: Concepts and Issues, was published in
2015.
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