This handbook presents a timely, broad-ranging and provocative overview of the essential nature of ecotourism. The chapters will both advance the existing central themes of ecotourism and provide challenging and divergent observations that will thrust ecotourism into new areas of research, policy and practice.
This handbook presents a timely, broad-ranging, and provocative overview of the essential nature of ecotourism. The chapters will both advance the existing central themes of ecotourism and provide challenging and divergent observations that will thrust ecotourism into new areas of research, policy, and practice.
The volume is arranged around four key themes: sustainability, ethics and identity, change, conflict, and consumption, and environment and learning, with a total of 28 chapters. The first section focuses on sustainability as a core ecotourism criterion, with a primary focus on some of the macro sustainability issues that have an impact on ecotourism. Foremost among these topics is the linkage to the UNs Sustainable Development Goals, which have relevance to ecotourism as one of the greenest or most responsible forms of tourism. The chapters in the second section provide a range of different topics that pull ecotourism research into new directions, including a chapter on enriching indigenous ecotourism through culturally sensitive universalism. The third section includes chapters on topics ranging from persons with disabilities as a neglected body of research in ecotourism, to ecotourism as a form of luxury consumption. The final section emphasises the link between ecotourism and learning about the natural world, including a deeply theoretical chapter on rewilding Europe. With contributions from authors around the world, this handbook gives a global platform to local voices, in both developed and emerging country contexts.
The multidisciplinary and international Routledge Handbook of Ecotourism will be of great interest to researchers, students, and practitioners working in tourism and sustainability.
THEME I Sustainability
1. Ecotourism and the Sustainable Development
Goals Anna Spenceley and Andrew Rylance
2. Ecotourism, regenerative tourism,
and the circular economy: emerging trends and ecotourism Jonathon Day, Sandra
Sydnor, Maria Marshall, and Steve Noakes
3. Ecotourism and the trouble with
transportation Stephen Schweinsberg and Simon Darcy
4. Linking resilience
thinking and sustainability pillars to ecotourism principles Valerie A.
Sheppard5 Overtourism in Petra protected area: tour guides perspectives
Areej Shabib Aloudat
6. Technology and the sustainable tourist in the new age
of disruption David A. Fennell THEME II Ethics and identities
7. Enchantment:
feeding care within the cracks of ecotourism Kellee Caton, Chris E. Hurst,
and Bryan S. R. Grimwood
8. Ecotourism development through culturally
sensitive universalism John B. Read IV and Bryan S. R. Grimwood
9. Wolf
ecotourism: a posthumanist approach to wildlife ecotourism Bastian Thomsen
10. Indigenous ecotourism in Canada Sonya Graci
11. The connection between
nature and Sįmi identity: the role of ecotourisma Cecilia De Bernardi
12. The
role of the visitor in stewardship and volunteering in tourism James Malitoni
Chilembwe
13. Ecotourism impact on livelihoods and wellbeing Ian E. Munanura
and Edwin Sabuhoro
14. Female entrepreneurship and ecotourism Ige Pirnar
THEME III Change, conflict, and consumption
15. Ecotourism and accessibility
for persons with disabilities Brian Garrod
16. Ecotourism and climate change
Jonathon Day and Steve Noakes
17. Animals caught in the crossfire:
humanitarian efforts and responsible tourism opportunities Nicholas Wise
18.
Anti-ecotourism: the convergence of localism and way of life Joe Pavelka
19.
Socialisation: How it augments ecotourists experiential satisfaction during
ecotrips and after (in social media aided virtual settings) Sudipta Kiran
Sarkar
20. Vietnamese ecotourists: ecotourists from an unconventional market
Huong H. Do, David Weaver, and Laura Lawton
21. Ecotourism as form of luxury
consumption Serena Volo and David DAcunto THEME IV Environment and learning
22. Ecotourism and theories of learning/education Manuel Ramón
Gonzįlez-Herrera and Silvia Giralt-Escobar
23. A critical analysis of
sustainable destination governance from environmental perspective: a
systematic review Kadir Ēakar
24. Will work for food: positioning animals in
ecotourism Georgette Leah Burns
25. Biodiversity conservation through an
agroecotourism project: the case of Ovack Village, Turkey Burcin Kalabay
Hatipoglu, Fatma Cam Denizci, and Tümay Imamolu
26. Ecotourism and rewilding
Europe Nils Lindhal Elliot
27. The role of ecotourism in nature needs half
vision Helen Kopnina
28. Ecotourism for conservation? Amanda L. Stronza,
Carter A. Hunt, and Lee A. Fitzgerald
David A. Fennell is a professor in the Department of Geography and Tourism Studies, Brock University, Canada. He is the founding editor-in-chief of the Journal of Ecotourism.