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Tourism has become increasingly shaped by neoliberal policies, yet
the consequences of this neoliberalisation are relatively
under-explored. This book provides a wide-ranging inquiry into the
particular manifestations of different variants of neoliberalism,
highlighting its uneven geographical development and the changing
dynamics of neoliberal policies in order to explain and evaluate
the effects of neoliberal processes on tourism. Covering a variety
of different aspects of neoliberalism and tourism, the chapters
investigate how different types of tourism are used as part of more
general neoliberalisation agendas, how neoliberalism differs
according to the geographic context, the importance of discourse in
shaping neoliberal practices and the different approaches of
putting the neoliberal ideology into practice. Aiming to initiate
debates about the connections between neoliberalism and tourism and
advance further research avenues, this book makes a timely
contribution which discusses the relationships between markets,
nation-states and societies from a social science perspective.
Neoliberalism is considered as a political-economic ideology, as
variants of the global neoliberal project, as discourse and
practices through which neoliberalism is enacted.
Political economy, in its various guises and transfigurations, is a
research philosophy that presents both social commentary and
theoretical progress and is concerned with a number of different
topics: politics, regulation and governance, production systems,
social relations, inequality and development amongst many others.
As a critical theory, political economy seeks to provide an
understanding of societies -- and of the structures and social
relations that form them -- in order to evoke social change toward
more equitable conditions. Despite the early influence of critical
development studies and political economy on tourism research,
political economy has received relatively little attention in
tourism research. Political Economy and Tourism the first volume to
bring together different theoretical perspectives and discourse in
political economy related to tourism. Written by leading scholars,
the text is organised into three sequential Parts, linked by the
principle that the political' and the economic' are intimately
connected. Part one presents different approaches to political
economy, including Marxist political economy, regulation,
comparative political economy, commodity chain research and
alternative political economies; Part two links key themes of
political economy, such as class, gender, labour, development and
consumption, to tourism; and Part three examines the political
economy at various geographical scales and focuses on the outcomes
and processes of the political act of planning and managing tourism
production. This engaging volume provides insights and alternative
critical perspectives on political economy theory to expand
discussions of tourism development and policy in the future.
Political Economy and Tourism is a valuable text for students,
researchers and academics interested in Tourism and related
disciplines.
Tourism has become increasingly shaped by neoliberal policies, yet
the consequences of this neoliberalisation are relatively
under-explored. This book provides a wide-ranging inquiry into the
particular manifestations of different variants of neoliberalism,
highlighting its uneven geographical development and the changing
dynamics of neoliberal policies in order to explain and evaluate
the effects of neoliberal processes on tourism. Covering a variety
of different aspects of neoliberalism and tourism, the chapters
investigate how different types of tourism are used as part of more
general neoliberalisation agendas, how neoliberalism differs
according to the geographic context, the importance of discourse in
shaping neoliberal practices and the different approaches of
putting the neoliberal ideology into practice. Aiming to initiate
debates about the connections between neoliberalism and tourism and
advance further research avenues, this book makes a timely
contribution which discusses the relationships between markets,
nation-states and societies from a social science perspective.
Neoliberalism is considered as a political-economic ideology, as
variants of the global neoliberal project, as discourse and
practices through which neoliberalism is enacted.
Political economy, in its various guises and transfigurations, is a
research philosophy that presents both social commentary and
theoretical progress and is concerned with a number of different
topics: politics, regulation and governance, production systems,
social relations, inequality and development amongst many others.
As a critical theory, political economy seeks to provide an
understanding of societies - and of the structures and social
relations that form them - in order to evoke social change toward
more equitable conditions. Despite the early influence of critical
development studies and political economy on tourism research,
political economy has received relatively little attention in
tourism research. Political Economy and Tourism the first volume to
bring together different theoretical perspectives and discourse in
political economy related to tourism. Written by leading scholars,
the text is organised into three sequential Parts, linked by the
principle that 'the political' and 'the economic' are intimately
connected. Part one presents different approaches to political
economy, including Marxist political economy, regulation,
comparative political economy, commodity chain research and
alternative political economies; Part two links key themes of
political economy, such as class, gender, labour, development and
consumption, to tourism; and Part three examines the political
economy at various geographical scales and focuses on the outcomes
and processes of the political act of planning and managing tourism
production. This engaging volume provides insights and alternative
critical perspectives on political economy theory to expand
discussions of tourism development and policy in the future.
Political Economy and Tourism is a valuable text for students,
researchers and academics interested in Tourism and related
disciplines.
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