Ecotourism has emerged over the last twenty years not just as a
market niche, but also as a strategy for combining development with
conservation in the developing world. Ecotourism, NGOs and
Development considers the basis for advocacy and argues that it is
premised upon a very limited and limiting view of the potential for
development.
Jim Butcher examines the advocacy of tourism as sustainable
development in a range of NGOs and within the general literature.
The research reveals that in spite of the plethora of critical
commentaries on the operation of ecotourism projects, there is
generally an uncritical take on the ideological basis of the
projects.
This book offers a timely critique of key assumptions underlying
ecotourism's status as sustainable development, arguing that
ecotourism as development strategy ties the fate of some of the
poorest people on the planet to localized environmental
imperatives.
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