Tourism and Its Discontents in the Global South
公開日 2020.01.29
An article written by CTR researcher, Prof. Joseph M. Cheer has been published in an academic journal, Current History.
Title
Tourism and Its Discontents in the Global South
Authors
Joseph M. Cheer, Center for Tourism Research, Wakayama University, Japan
Source
Current History -A Journal of Contemporary World Affairs, 2020, 119:813, pp. 29-33
http://currenthistory.com/Article.php?ID=1637
*Indexed in Scopus
Journal details: https://www.scopus.com/sourceid/23991
Abstract
Contemporary travel to the global South typically takes place against a backdrop of poverty, enduring legacies of conflict and environmental crises, natural resource scarcities, and developmental deficiencies such as a lack of diversified economies. This leads to perhaps the most contentious aspect of global travel: beyond the clash of cultures, disproportionate power relationships are established between relatively moneyed, educated, curious travelers and desperate, poorly educated hosts. While there are obviously exceptions to such generalizations, these power dynamics are all too common in host-guest relations in the developing world.