Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /

The origins of this book lie in a project of the International Geographical Union Study Group on the Geography of Sustainable Tourism. The theme, Tourism and migration', reflects the growing interests of tourism geographers - in common with other geographers and social scientists - to reach across traditional cleavages in the way research is undertaken and knowledge is formed. In this instance, the aim was to connect the largely discrete research domains of tourism studies and migration. This was informed not only by awareness of the limitations of disciplinary barriers, but also by the growing need to respond to the emergence of new forms of mobility and circulation, which fitted uncomfortably into many of the analytical categories of tourism and migration studies. The extension of property rights across boundaries (e.g. second homes, vacation homes and time shares), space-time convergence, changing approaches to work and leisure, and structural changes in economies and the demographic profiles of societies are only some of the factors which have generated these new forms of mobility. These serve to bind places and individuals in new and challenging ways with implication for both movers and stayers. The various chapters of this volume bring together a range of dimensions and locations within which to study the relationships between tourism and migration.

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Main Authors: Hall, C. Michael. editor., Williams, Allan M. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2002
Subjects:Geography., Economic geography., Population., Economic growth., Human geography., Geography, general., Human Geography., Economic Geography., Population Economics., Economic Growth.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3554-4
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id KOHA-OAI-TEST:186979
record_format koha
institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Geography.
Economic geography.
Population.
Economic growth.
Human geography.
Geography.
Geography, general.
Human Geography.
Economic Geography.
Population Economics.
Economic Growth.
Geography.
Economic geography.
Population.
Economic growth.
Human geography.
Geography.
Geography, general.
Human Geography.
Economic Geography.
Population Economics.
Economic Growth.
spellingShingle Geography.
Economic geography.
Population.
Economic growth.
Human geography.
Geography.
Geography, general.
Human Geography.
Economic Geography.
Population Economics.
Economic Growth.
Geography.
Economic geography.
Population.
Economic growth.
Human geography.
Geography.
Geography, general.
Human Geography.
Economic Geography.
Population Economics.
Economic Growth.
Hall, C. Michael. editor.
Williams, Allan M. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
description The origins of this book lie in a project of the International Geographical Union Study Group on the Geography of Sustainable Tourism. The theme, Tourism and migration', reflects the growing interests of tourism geographers - in common with other geographers and social scientists - to reach across traditional cleavages in the way research is undertaken and knowledge is formed. In this instance, the aim was to connect the largely discrete research domains of tourism studies and migration. This was informed not only by awareness of the limitations of disciplinary barriers, but also by the growing need to respond to the emergence of new forms of mobility and circulation, which fitted uncomfortably into many of the analytical categories of tourism and migration studies. The extension of property rights across boundaries (e.g. second homes, vacation homes and time shares), space-time convergence, changing approaches to work and leisure, and structural changes in economies and the demographic profiles of societies are only some of the factors which have generated these new forms of mobility. These serve to bind places and individuals in new and challenging ways with implication for both movers and stayers. The various chapters of this volume bring together a range of dimensions and locations within which to study the relationships between tourism and migration.
format Texto
topic_facet Geography.
Economic geography.
Population.
Economic growth.
Human geography.
Geography.
Geography, general.
Human Geography.
Economic Geography.
Population Economics.
Economic Growth.
author Hall, C. Michael. editor.
Williams, Allan M. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Hall, C. Michael. editor.
Williams, Allan M. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Hall, C. Michael. editor.
title Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
title_short Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
title_full Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
title_fullStr Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
title_full_unstemmed Tourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption /
title_sort tourism and migration [electronic resource] : new relationships between production and consumption /
publisher Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,
publishDate 2002
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3554-4
work_keys_str_mv AT hallcmichaeleditor tourismandmigrationelectronicresourcenewrelationshipsbetweenproductionandconsumption
AT williamsallanmeditor tourismandmigrationelectronicresourcenewrelationshipsbetweenproductionandconsumption
AT springerlinkonlineservice tourismandmigrationelectronicresourcenewrelationshipsbetweenproductionandconsumption
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:1869792018-07-30T23:09:45ZTourism and Migration [electronic resource] : New Relationships between Production and Consumption / Hall, C. Michael. editor. Williams, Allan M. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textDordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,2002.engThe origins of this book lie in a project of the International Geographical Union Study Group on the Geography of Sustainable Tourism. The theme, Tourism and migration', reflects the growing interests of tourism geographers - in common with other geographers and social scientists - to reach across traditional cleavages in the way research is undertaken and knowledge is formed. In this instance, the aim was to connect the largely discrete research domains of tourism studies and migration. This was informed not only by awareness of the limitations of disciplinary barriers, but also by the growing need to respond to the emergence of new forms of mobility and circulation, which fitted uncomfortably into many of the analytical categories of tourism and migration studies. The extension of property rights across boundaries (e.g. second homes, vacation homes and time shares), space-time convergence, changing approaches to work and leisure, and structural changes in economies and the demographic profiles of societies are only some of the factors which have generated these new forms of mobility. These serve to bind places and individuals in new and challenging ways with implication for both movers and stayers. The various chapters of this volume bring together a range of dimensions and locations within which to study the relationships between tourism and migration.1. Tourism, migration, circulation and mobility: The contingencies of time and place -- 2. Labour mobility and tourism in the post 1989 transition in Hungary -- 3. Flexible labour markets, ethnicity and tourism-related migration in Australia and New Zealand -- 4. The ‘Big OE’: New Zealanders overseas experiences in Britain -- 5. Potential immigrants: the interface between tourism and immigration in Israel -- 6. Foreign immigration and tourism development in Spain’s Balearic Islands -- 7. Tourism and the growth of urban ethnic islands -- 8. The impact of lifestyle migration on rural communities: A case study of Akaroa, New Zealand -- 9. German second home development in Sweden -- 10. Second-home ownership: A sustainable semi-migration -- 11. Tourism and the Chinese diaspora -- 12. Migrant communities and tourism consumption: The case of the Vietnamese in Australia -- 13. Reconceptualising VFR tourism: friends, relatives and migration in a domestic context -- 14. The Return Visit-Retun Migration Connection -- 15. Conclusions: tourism-migration relationships.The origins of this book lie in a project of the International Geographical Union Study Group on the Geography of Sustainable Tourism. The theme, Tourism and migration', reflects the growing interests of tourism geographers - in common with other geographers and social scientists - to reach across traditional cleavages in the way research is undertaken and knowledge is formed. In this instance, the aim was to connect the largely discrete research domains of tourism studies and migration. This was informed not only by awareness of the limitations of disciplinary barriers, but also by the growing need to respond to the emergence of new forms of mobility and circulation, which fitted uncomfortably into many of the analytical categories of tourism and migration studies. The extension of property rights across boundaries (e.g. second homes, vacation homes and time shares), space-time convergence, changing approaches to work and leisure, and structural changes in economies and the demographic profiles of societies are only some of the factors which have generated these new forms of mobility. These serve to bind places and individuals in new and challenging ways with implication for both movers and stayers. The various chapters of this volume bring together a range of dimensions and locations within which to study the relationships between tourism and migration.Geography.Economic geography.Population.Economic growth.Human geography.Geography.Geography, general.Human Geography.Economic Geography.Population Economics.Economic Growth.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3554-4URN:ISBN:9789401735544