Tourism has become the world's largest industry, according to
the World Tourism Organization; no surprise when one considers that
it incorporates the world's oldest profession. In some developing
regions, such as the Caribbean or the South Pacific, tourism is the
primary sector in which significant economic growth takes place. In
other regions, including areas of Latin America, Africa, the Middle
East, and formerly communist eastern Europe, tourism is just
beginning to take off. In all of these areas, tourisM's impact has
been decidedly mixed. Nowhere is this more visible than in the
context of women's roles in tourism. The contributors demonstrate
the many ways in which gender determines the roles they play as
both tourists and providers of tourism as product and service. A
valuable contribution to tourism studies, women's studies, and the
literature of economic development.
The premises of this unique collection of research are that
women's roles in tourism are gendered, just as are their other
roles in gendered societies; that tourism affects women differently
than it affects men; and that women themselves are affected in
different ways by tourism depending on such factors as race,
region, and class (leisured consumer vs. working producer, or guest
vs. host). The contributors cover theoretical perspectives,
including those provided by feminists and economic development
analysts; women's roles in tourism in the mature industries of the
Caribbean, Southeast Asia, and the South Pacific; women's roles in
the less-developed tourist destinations of the Middle East, Latin
America, Africa, and eastern Europe; and implications for the
future of economic development policy and of gender relations in
tourism.
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