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Human dignity has experienced limited attention in tourism studies.
The interlinked dimensions of dignity in tourism urgently ask for
broad avenues of future research, as tourism is both an
information-intensive industry and an "experience good" resulting
from the relationship and co-creation processes involving hosts and
guests in different political, socio-economic, cultural, and
environmental contexts. These contexts play a role in how an
individual's values, norms, and experiences may be experienced in
tourism. This edited book is one of the first attempts to apply to
tourism a humanistic management approach entailing a re-discovery
of the value of human life, dignity, and awareness of the ethical
dimensions of work. The book develops awareness of the contemporary
relevance of the human dignity concept to interpret and manage the
weaknesses of traditional approaches to tourism and cope with the
challenges and new scenarios, including the current COVID-19
pandemic crisis. It presents ethical values and norms as both
foundations and vehicles to dignify tourism stakeholders' vision
and mission (policy, strategies, and practices) as well as
people/tourist beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors. It grounds
humanistic education as a pervasive mechanism to innovate tourism
management contents and practices by offering to different targets
new educational and training formats or framing differently
traditional ones. Presenting both a critical and a positive
approach to tourism management, the diversity of disciplinary
approaches, case studies, and examples makes the book attractive to
a variety of readers including tourism scholars, researchers,
practitioners, and postgraduate students of management and
organization disciplines.
Tourism is a fast-growing and changing industry, which has become a
driver of economic development in both developed and underdeveloped
countries. While the tourism industry's potential for shared value
creation and sustainable development is acknowledged, the concerns
around the environmental and social pressures remain a challenge
for businesses, organizations, and destinations. This is because
sustainable tourism arguably conflicts with the predominant
neoliberal structure of the economy and with the hierarchical,
profit- and consumption-driven societies. The emphasis on
competition, growth, and profitability may undermine economic
viability itself by consuming unreproducible resources and by
undermining the six essential elements-dignity, people, prosperity,
social justice, planet, and partnership-that are conceptually
linked to sustainable development. The crises recurrently
challenging the global travel and tourism environment, including
climate change, bushfires, extreme weather disasters, pandemics,
and the financial crisis, show the weaknesses of neoliberal
approaches and the collective economic dependency of countries on
tourism that is vulnerable, if not completely unsustainable. This
vulnerability asks for understanding that the collective future
depends on developing entirely new approaches and interpretation of
tourism to effectively respond to the human, societal, social, and
climate challenges. This book offers a novel and original
perspective entailing the application of a humanistic management
approach to sustainable tourism, which is centered on the value of
human life, the protection of human dignity and the promotion of
well-being. Multiple theoretical approaches, methods, and practical
cases, on an international scale, shed light on shared value
creation and human dignity as a necessary condition for its
achievement in different contexts. Implicitly and explicitly, they
respond to the current urgency to implement strategies to recover
from the worldwide impact of the pandemic crisis and to provide a
vision of what tourism could and should be when it recovers. It
will be of interest to researchers, academics, professionals, and
postgraduates in the fields of management, sustainability, and
tourism development.
Tourism is a fast-growing and changing industry, which has become a
driver of economic development in both developed and underdeveloped
countries. While the tourism industry's potential for shared value
creation and sustainable development is acknowledged, the concerns
around the environmental and social pressures remain a challenge
for businesses, organizations, and destinations. This is because
sustainable tourism arguably conflicts with the predominant
neoliberal structure of the economy and with the hierarchical,
profit- and consumption-driven societies. The emphasis on
competition, growth, and profitability may undermine economic
viability itself by consuming unreproducible resources and by
undermining the six essential elements-dignity, people, prosperity,
social justice, planet, and partnership-that are conceptually
linked to sustainable development. The crises recurrently
challenging the global travel and tourism environment, including
climate change, bushfires, extreme weather disasters, pandemics,
and the financial crisis, show the weaknesses of neoliberal
approaches and the collective economic dependency of countries on
tourism that is vulnerable, if not completely unsustainable. This
vulnerability asks for understanding that the collective future
depends on developing entirely new approaches and interpretation of
tourism to effectively respond to the human, societal, social, and
climate challenges. This book offers a novel and original
perspective entailing the application of a humanistic management
approach to sustainable tourism, which is centered on the value of
human life, the protection of human dignity and the promotion of
well-being. Multiple theoretical approaches, methods, and practical
cases, on an international scale, shed light on shared value
creation and human dignity as a necessary condition for its
achievement in different contexts. Implicitly and explicitly, they
respond to the current urgency to implement strategies to recover
from the worldwide impact of the pandemic crisis and to provide a
vision of what tourism could and should be when it recovers. It
will be of interest to researchers, academics, professionals, and
postgraduates in the fields of management, sustainability, and
tourism development.
Human dignity has experienced limited attention in tourism studies.
The interlinked dimensions of dignity in tourism urgently ask for
broad avenues of future research, as tourism is both an
information-intensive industry and an "experience good" resulting
from the relationship and co-creation processes involving hosts and
guests in different political, socio-economic, cultural, and
environmental contexts. These contexts play a role in how an
individual's values, norms, and experiences may be experienced in
tourism. This edited book is one of the first attempts to apply to
tourism a humanistic management approach entailing a re-discovery
of the value of human life, dignity, and awareness of the ethical
dimensions of work. The book develops awareness of the contemporary
relevance of the human dignity concept to interpret and manage the
weaknesses of traditional approaches to tourism and cope with the
challenges and new scenarios, including the current COVID-19
pandemic crisis. It presents ethical values and norms as both
foundations and vehicles to dignify tourism stakeholders' vision
and mission (policy, strategies, and practices) as well as
people/tourist beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors. It grounds
humanistic education as a pervasive mechanism to innovate tourism
management contents and practices by offering to different targets
new educational and training formats or framing differently
traditional ones. Presenting both a critical and a positive
approach to tourism management, the diversity of disciplinary
approaches, case studies, and examples makes the book attractive to
a variety of readers including tourism scholars, researchers,
practitioners, and postgraduate students of management and
organization disciplines.
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