Tourism: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Recent developments: clean up , edit
→‎Special forms of tourism: group alpha list into ACTUAL groups
Line 131: Line 131:
The terms ''tourism'' and ''travel'' are sometimes used interchangeably. In this context travel has a similar definition to tourism, but implies a more purposeful journey. The terms ''tourism'' and ''tourist'' are sometimes used pejoratively, to imply a shallow interest in the cultures or locations visited by tourists.
The terms ''tourism'' and ''travel'' are sometimes used interchangeably. In this context travel has a similar definition to tourism, but implies a more purposeful journey. The terms ''tourism'' and ''tourist'' are sometimes used pejoratively, to imply a shallow interest in the cultures or locations visited by tourists.


==Special forms of tourism==
==Niche tourism==
'''Physical activity or sports-oriented''' niche tourism includes [[adventure tourism]] such as [[mountaineering]] and [[hiking]] ([[tramping]]); [[Backpacking (travel)|Backpacker Tourism]]; [[Sport travel]] to do [[skiing]], [[golf]] and [[scuba diving]] or see a sports event (e.g., [[FIFA World Cup]]); and [[extreme tourism]] for people interested in risky activities.
For the past few decades other forms of tourism, also known as '''niche tourism''', have been becoming more popular, particularly:

* ''[[Adventure tourism]]'': tourism involving travel in rugged regions, or adventurous sports such as [[mountaineering]] and [[hiking]] ([[tramping]]).
'''Learning-oriented''' niche tourism includes ''audio tourism'' and ''[[audio walking tours]]''; ''[[bookstore tourism]]'', in which travellers visit independent bookstores; [[creative tourism]] workshops; educational tourism for classes; ancestry tourism, to visit birth places; ''Hobby tourism'' (such as [[garden]] tours, [[amateur radio]] [[DX-pedition]]s, or [[square dance]] cruises).
* ''[[Agritourism]]'': farm based tourism, helping to support the local agricultural economy.
*The cultural sub-type of learning-oriented niche tourism focuses on cultural and arts activities, including [[cultural tourism]], [[music tourism]], and[[heritage tourism]]. The nature and environment-oriented sub-types include [[Coastal Tourism]]; [[Ecotourism]]'' (e.g. sustainable tourism in [[Rainforests]] or [[national park]]s); '' [[Garden tourism]]; and [[Rural Tourism]] such as [[Agritourism]].
* ''Ancestry tourism'': (also known as genealogy tourism) is the travel with the aim of tracing one's ancestry, visiting the birth places of these ancestors and sometimes getting to know distant family.

* ''[[Armchair tourism]]'' and ''[[virtual tourism]]'': not traveling physically, but exploring the world through internet, books, TV, etc.
'''Lifestyle-oriented''' niche tourism types include [[Gay tourism]]; [[Gourmet tourism]]; [[Wine tourism]]; [[Health tourism]]; [[Medical tourism]]; Inclusive tourism for people with disabilities;''[[Mystical tourism]] (e.g., involving [[Meditation]], [[yoga]],and rituals).
* ''Audio tourism'': includes ''[[audio walking tours]]'' and other audio guided forms of tourism including museum audio guides and audio travel books.

* ''[[Backpacking (travel)|Backpacker Tourism]]'' is a term used to denote a form of low-cost independent international travel, differentiating it from other forms of tourism notably by the following typical attributes: minimal budget use, longer duration traveling, use of public transport and multiple destinations/countries. The origin of the name comes from the backpacks that budget travelers generally carry in the interests of mobility and flexibility.
===Miscellaneous types===
* ''[[Bookstore Tourism]]'' is a grassroots effort to support independent bookstores by promoting them as a travel destination.
*'''[[Dark tourism]]''' includes travel to sites associated with death and suffering, such as the scene of the [[Hindenburg (airship)|Hindenburg airship disaster]], or to the sites of disasters ([[Disaster tourism]]). Other types of tourism include [[Drug tourism]], (e.g., to use drugs in Amsterdam); [[Gambling tourism]]; and [[Sex tourism]] (e.g., to have sex with prostitutes).
* ''[[Creative Tourism]]'' is a new form of tourism that allows visitors to develop their creative potential, and get closer to local people, through informal participation in hands-on workshops that draw on the culture of their holiday destinations.
* ''[[Cultural tourism]]'': includes [[Urbanization|urban]] tourism, visiting historical or interesting cities, and experiencing their cultural heritages. This type of tourism may also include specialized cultural experiences, such as art museum tourism where the tourist visits many art museums during the tour, or opera tourism where the tourist sees many operas or concerts during the tour.
* ''[[Coastal Tourism]]'' involves tourist products located along Coastal Environments - due to the limited extent of coastal environments they often are amongst the first places to experience tourist congestion for a region.
* ''[[Dark tourism]]'': is the travel to sites associated with death and suffering. The first tourist agency to specialise in this kind of tourism started with trips to Lakehurst, New Jersey, the scene of the [[Hindenburg (airship)|Hindenburg airship disaster]].
* ''[[Disaster tourism]]'': traveling to a disaster scene not primarily for helping, but because it is interesting to see. It can be a problem if it hinders rescue, relief and repair work.
* ''[[Drug tourism]]'': travel to a country to obtain or consume drugs, either legally or illegally.
* ''[[Ecotourism]]'': sustainable tourism which has minimal impact on the environment, such as [[safari]]s ([[Kenya]]), [[Rainforests]] ([[Belize]]) and [[hiking]] ([[Lapland]]), or [[national park]]s.
* ''Educational tourism'': may involve traveling to an education institution, a wooded retreat or some other destination in order to take personal-interest classes, such as cooking classes with a famous chef or crafts classes.
*''[[Extreme tourism]]'': tourism associated with high risk.
*''[[Free Independent Traveler]]'': a sector of the market and philosophy of constructing a vacation by sourcing one's own components eg accommodation, transport.
* ''[[Gambling tourism]]'', e.g. to [[Atlantic City, New Jersey|Atlantic City]], [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]], [[Palm Springs, California]], [[Macau]] or [[Monte Carlo]] for the purpose of gambling at the [[casino]]s there.
* ''[[Garden tourism]]'' visiting [[botanical garden]]s famous places in the [[history of gardening]], such as [[Versailles]] and the [[Taj Mahal]].
* ''[[Gay tourism]]'' is tourism that appeals to people attracted to alternate lifestyles and their friends.
* ''[[Gourmet tourism]]'' is tourism that has the objective of tasting new flavors and combination of flavors in other countries with ancestral tradition for this, such as Peru.
* ''[[Heritage tourism]]'': visiting historical ([[Rome]],[[St. Petersburg]], [[Athens]], [[Cracow]], [[Prague]]) or industrial sites, such as old [[canal]]s, [[railway]]s, battlegrounds, etc.
* ''[[Health tourism]]'': usually to escape from cities or relieve stress, perhaps for some 'fun in the sun', etc. Often to [[Sanatorium]]s or "health spas".
* ''Hobby tourism'': tourism alone or with groups to participate in hobby interests, to meet others with similar interests, or to experience something pertinent to the hobby. Examples might be [[garden]] tours, [[amateur radio]] [[DX-pedition]]s, or [[square dance]] cruises.
* ''Inclusive tourism'': tourism marketed to those with functional limits or disabilities. Referred to as "Tourism for All" in some regions. Destinations often employ Universal Design and Universal Destination Development principles.
*''[[Mass Tourism]] is an [[ecotourism]] policy to minimise the [[ecological footprint|footprint]] of tourists by concentrating them into a small area. Mass tourism also maximises the ultisation of tourist infrastructure.
*''[[Mass Tourism]] is an [[ecotourism]] policy to minimise the [[ecological footprint|footprint]] of tourists by concentrating them into a small area. Mass tourism also maximises the ultisation of tourist infrastructure.
*[[Free Independent Traveler]]'': a sector of the market in which the tourists select their own accommodation and transport, rather than using the established tourism booking system.
* ''[[Medical tourism]]'', e.g.:
* ''[[Pop-culture tourism]]'': tourism by those that visit a particular location after reading about it or seeing it used as a location in a film.
**for what is illegal in one's own country, such as [[abortion]] or [[euthanasia]]
**for advanced care that is not available in one's own country
**in the case that there are long waiting lists in one's own country
**for use of free or cheap health care organisations
*''[[Music tourism]]'' is the act of visiting a city or town in order to see a gig or festival.
*''[[Mystical tourism]]'': Tourism for people that believe feel energy and travel to places to [[Meditation|meditate]], [[yoga]], special events, ceremonies, mystical rituals.
* ''[[Pop-culture tourism]]'': tourism by those that visit a particular location after reading about it or seeing it in a film.
* ''[[Perpetual traveler|Perpetual tourism]]'': individuals always on vacation; some of them, for tax purposes, to avoid being resident in any country.
* ''[[Perpetual traveler|Perpetual tourism]]'': individuals always on vacation; some of them, for tax purposes, to avoid being resident in any country.
* ''[[Pilgrimage]] Tourism'': pilgrimages to ancient holy places ([[Rome]] and [[Santiago de Compostela]] for Catholics, temples and stupas of [[Nepal]] for the Hindus and Buddhist, [[Mount Athos]] or [[Painted churches of northern Moldavia]] for the Orthodox), religious sites such as [[mosque]]s, [[shrine]]s, etc.
* ''[[Pilgrimage]] Tourism'': pilgrimages to ancient holy places ([[Rome]] and [[Santiago de Compostela]] for Catholics, temples and stupas of [[Nepal]] for the Hindus and Buddhist, [[Mount Athos]] or [[Painted churches of northern Moldavia]] for the Orthodox), religious sites such as [[mosque]]s, [[shrine]]s, etc.
* ''[[Rural Tourism]]'': Tourism in rural areas that often incorporates a combination of private individuals and community organizations in a collaborative effort. Depending on the activities involved, rural tourism can also resemble cultural tourism or farm tourism.
* ''[[Sacred travel]]'' or metaphysical tourism is a form of New Age travel where believers travel to and perform rituals at religious sites
* ''[[Sacred travel]]'' or metaphysical tourism is a form of New Age travel where believers travel to and perform rituals at religious sites
* ''[[Sex tourism]]'': traveling solely for the purpose of sexual activity, usually with prostitutes
* ''[[Shopping tourism]]'' promoting shopping festivals as tourist drawcards such as the [[Dubai Shopping Festival|Dubai]], [[Singapore]], [[Hong Kong]] and [[Gold Coast, Queensland|the Gold Coast]].
* ''[[Shopping tourism]]'' promoting shopping festivals as tourist drawcards such as the [[Dubai Shopping Festival|Dubai]], [[Singapore]], [[Hong Kong]] and [[Gold Coast, Queensland|the Gold Coast]].
* ''[[Solo Travel]]'': traveling alone
* ''[[Solo Travel]]'': traveling alone
* ''[[Sport travel]]'': [[skiing]], [[golf]] and [[scuba diving]] are popular ways to spend a vacation. This could also include traveling to a major international sporting event such as the [[FIFA World Cup]] or following a tour such as [[the Ashes]] or [[British and Irish Lions]].
* ''[[Space tourism]]'': traveling in [[outer space]] or on [[spaceships]].
* ''[[Space tourism]]'': traveling in [[outer space]] or on [[spaceships]].
* ''[[Vacilando]]'' is a special kind of wanderer for whom the process of traveling is more important than the destination.
* ''[[Vacilando]]'' is a special kind of wanderer for whom the process of traveling and discovery is more important than the destination.
* ''VFR'' or ''Visiting Family and Relatives'': traveling to visit persons related by close family ties and combining this with vacation-type activities; distinct from ''ancestry tourism'', which involves genealogical research <!-- merged in from [[VFR Tourism]] -->
* ''VFR'' or ''Visiting Family and Relatives'': traveling to visit persons related by close family ties and combining this with vacation-type activities; distinct from ''ancestry tourism'', which involves genealogical research <!-- merged in from [[VFR Tourism]] -->

* ''[[Wine tourism]]'', the visiting of [[growing region]]s, [[vineyard]]s, [[winery|wineries]], tasting rooms, wine festivals, and similar places or events for the purpose of consuming or purchasing [[wine]].





''[[Armchair tourism]]'' and ''[[virtual tourism]]'': not traveling physically, but exploring the world through internet, books, TV, etc


==Trends==
==Trends==

Revision as of 16:11, 15 May 2007

The Eiffel Tower, a symbol of tourism in Paris, France
Praia da Luz, Algarve
Tourists on Oahu, Hawaii

Tourism is travel for predominantly recreational or leisure purposes or the provision of services to support this leisure travel. The World Tourism Organization defines tourists as people who "travel to and stay in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes not related to the exercise of an activity remunerated from within the place visited". Tourism has become a popular global leisure activity. In 2004, there were over 763 million international tourist arrivals.[1]

Tourism is vital for many countries, due to the income generated by the consumption of goods and services by tourists, the taxes levied on businesses in the tourism industry, and the opportunity for employment in the service industries associated with tourism. These service industries include transportation services such as cruise ships and taxis, accommodation such as hotels, restaurants, bars, and entertainment venues, and other hospitality industry services such as spas and resorts.

Definition

One of the earliest definitions of tourism was provided by the Austrian economist in 1910, who defined it as, "bob total of operators, mainly of an economic nature, which directly relate to the entry, stay and movement of foreigners inside and outside a certain country, city or a region."

Hunziker and Krapf, in 1941, defined tourism as "the sum of the phenomena and relationships arising from the travel and stay of non-residents, insofar as they do not lead to permanent residence and are not connected with any earning activity."[2] In 1976 Tourism Society of England defined it as "Tourism is the temporary, short-term movement of people to destination outside the places where they normally live and work and their activities during the stay at each destination. It includes movements for all purposes." In 1981 International Association of Scientific Experts in Tourism defined Tourism in terms of particular activities selected by choice and undertaken outside the home environment.

The United Nations classified three forms of tourism in 1994 in its Recommendations on Tourism Statistics: Domestic tourism, which involves residents of the given country traveling only within this country; Inbound tourism, involving non-residents traveling in the given country; and Outbound tourism, involving residents traveling in another country.

The UN also derived different categories of tourism by combining the 3 basic forms of tourism: Internal tourism, which comprises domestic tourism and inbound tourism;National tourism, which comprises domestic tourism and outbound tourism; and International tourism, which consists of inbound tourism and outbound tourism.

Intrabound tourism is a term coined by the Korea Tourism Organization and widely accepted in Korea. Intrabound tourism differs from domestic tourism in that the former encompasses policy-making and implementation of national tourism policies.

Recently, the tourism industry has shifted from the promotion of inbound tourism to the promotion of intrabound tourism because many countries are experiencing tough competition for inbound tourists. Some national policymakers have shifted their priority to the promotion of intrabound tourism to contribute to the local economy. Examples of such campaigns include "See America" in the United States, "Get Going Canada" in Canada, and "Guseok Guseok" (corner to corner) in South Korea.

Before people are able to experience tourism they usually need disposable income (i.e. money to spend on non-essentials); time off from work or other responsibilities; leisure time tourism infrastructure, such as transport and accommodation; and legal clearance to travel.

Individually, sufficient health is also a condition, and of course the inclination to travel. Furthermore, in some countries there are legal restrictions on travelling, especially abroad. Certain states with strong governmental control over the lives of citizens (notably established Communist states) may restrict foreign travel only to trustworthy citizens. The United States prohibits its citizens from traveling to some countries, for example Cuba.

History

Beaches make popular tourist resorts. 90 Mile Beach, Lakes Entrance, Australia.

Wealthy people have always traveled to distant parts of the world to see great buildings or other works of art, to learn new languages, to experience new cultures, or to taste new cuisine. As long ago as the time of the Roman Republic places such as Baiae were popular coastal resorts for the rich. Sanchi

The terms tourist and tourism were first used as official terms in 1937 by the League of Nations. Tourism was defined as people travelling abroad for periods of over 24 hours.

Health tourism & leisure travel

File:Peru Machu Picchu Sunset.jpg
View of Machu Picchu, Peru

The history of European tourism can perhaps be said to originate with the medieval pilgrimage. Although undertaken primarily for religious reasons, the pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales quite clearly saw the experience as a kind of holiday (the term itself being derived from the 'holy day' and its associated leisure activities). Pilgrimages created a variety of tourist aspects that still exist - bringing back souvenirs, obtaining credit with foreign banks (in medieval times utilising international networks established by Jews and Lombards), and making use of space available on existing forms of transport (such as the use of medieval English wine ships bound for Vigo by pilgrims to Santiago De Compostela). Pilgrimages are still important in modern tourism - such as to Lourdes or Knock in Ireland. But there are modern equivalents - Graceland and the grave of Jim Morrison in Père Lachaise Cemetery.

During the seventeenth century, it became fashionable in England to undertake a Grand Tour. The sons of the nobility and gentry were sent upon an extended tour of Europe as an educational experience. The eighteenth century was the golden age of the Grand Tour, and many of the fashionable visitors were painted at Rome by Pompeo Batoni. A modern equivalent of the Grand Tour is the phenomenon of the backpacker, although cultural holidays, such as those offered by Swann-Hellenic, are also important.

Health tourism has always existed, but it was not until the eighteenth century that it became important. In England, it was associated with spas, places with supposedly health-giving mineral waters, treating diseases from gout to liver disorders and bronchitis. Bath was the most fashionable resort, but Buxton, Harrogate, and Tunbridge Wells, amongst others, also flourished. Of course, people visited these places for the balls and other entertainments, just as much as 'the waters'. Continental Spas such as Karlsbad attracted many fashionable travelers by the nineteenth century.

It could be argued that Britain was the home of the seaside holiday. In travelling to the coast, the population was following in the steps of Royalty. King George III made regular visits to Weymouth when in poor health. At the time, a number of doctors argued the benefits of bathing in sea water, and sea bathing as a widespread practice was popularised by the Prince Regent (later George IV), who frequented Brighton for this purpose.

The Colca Canyon in Arequipa, Peru

Leisure travel was associated with the industrialization of United Kingdom – the first European country to promote leisure time to the increasing industrial population. Initially, this applied to the owners of the machinery of production, the economic oligarchy, the factory owners, and the traders. These comprised the new middle class. Cox & Kings were the first official travel company to be formed in 1758. Later, the working class could take advantage of leisure time.

The British origin of this new industry is reflected in many place names. At Nice, one of the first and best-established holiday resorts on the French Riviera, the long esplanade along the seafront is known to this day as the Promenade des Anglais; in many other historic resorts in continental Europe, old well-established palace hotels have names like the Hotel Bristol, the Hotel Carlton or the Hotel Majestic - reflecting the dominance of English customers.

Winter tourism

Winter sports were largely invented by the British leisured classes, initially at the Swiss village of Zermatt (Valais), and St Moritz in 1864. The first packaged winter sports holidays took place in 1902 at Adelboden, Switzerland. Winter sports were a natural answer for a leisured class looking for amusement during the coldest season.

File:Fun & Ski Festival.jpg
Tourists at a Pyeongchang Ski Resort, Gangwondo, Korea.

Organized sport was well established in Britain before it reached other countries. The vocabulary of sport bears witness to this: rugby, football, and boxing all originated in Britain, and even tennis, originally a French sport, was formalized and codified by the British, who hosted the first national championship in the nineteenth century, at Wimbledon.

The Fun Ski & Snow Festival, which has been organized annually by Korea tourism organization since 1998 and participated by about 10,000 tourists from Asia, is one of the most successful winter tourism products in Asia. The festival provides a variety of events such as ski and sled competitions, ski and snow board lessons, performances and recreational activities. Majority of the event participants are foreign visitors who come from countries with a warm climate that have no snow. The event offers them opportunities to enjoy winter and winter sports in Korea.

In addition, southern South American countries making up the Patagonia region in Chile and Argentina attract thousands of tourists every year. Skiing is extremely popular in the mountainous areas.

Mass travel

Mass travel could only develop with improvements in technology allowed the transport of large numbers of people in a short space of time to places of leisure interest, and greater numbers of people began to enjoy the benefits of leisure time.

Tourists at the Trevi Fountain, Rome, Italy.
La Caleta beach in Cádiz, Spain.

The pioneer of modern mass tourism was Thomas Cook who, on 5 July 1841, organized the first package tour in history. He arranged for the rail company to charge one shilling per person for a group of 570 temperance campaigners from Leicester to a rally in Loughborough, eleven miles away. Cook was paid a share of the fares actually charged to the passengers, as the railway tickets, being legal contracts between company and passenger, could not have been issued at his own price. There had been railway excursions before, but this one included entrance to an entertainment held in private grounds, rail tickets and food for the train journey. Cook immediately saw the potential of a convenient 'off the peg' holiday product in which everything was included in one cost. He organised packages inclusive of accommodation for the Great Exhibition, and afterwards pioneered package holidays in both Britain (particularly in Scotland) and on the European continent (where Paris and the Alps were the most popular destinations).

He was soon followed by others (the Polytechnic Touring Association, Dean and Dawson etc.), with the result that the tourist industry developed rapidly in late Victorian Britain. Initially it was supported by the growing middle classes, who had time off from their work, and who could afford the luxury of travel and possibly even staying for periods of time in boarding houses.

Malá Strana (Lesser Quarter) packed with tourists on a busy summer day in Prague, Czech Republic.

The Bank Holidays Act 1871 introduced a statutory right for workers to take holidays, even if they were not paid at the time. By the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the tradition of the working class holiday had become firmly established in Britain. These were largely focused upon the seaside resorts.

The spread of the railway network in the nineteenth century resulted in the growth of Britain's seaside towns by bringing them within easy distance of Britain's urban centres. Blackpool was created by the construction of a line to Fleetwood, and some resorts were promoted by the railway companies themselves - Morecambe by the Midland Railway and Cleethorpes by the Great Central Railway. Other resorts included Scarborough in Yorkshire, servicing Leeds and Bradford; Weston-super-Mare in Somerset, catering for the inhabitants of Bristol; and Skegness, patronised by the residents of the industrial East Midlands. The cockneys of London flocked to Southend-on-Sea, mainly by Thames Steamer, and the South Coast resorts such as Broadstairs, Brighton, and Eastbourne were only a train ride away, with others further afield such as Bournemouth, Bognor Regis and Weymouth.

For a century, domestic tourism was the norm, with foreign travel being reserved for the rich or the culturally curious. A number of inland destinations, such as the English Lake District, and Snowdonia appealed to those who liked the countryside and fine scenery. The holiday camp began to appear in the 1930s, but this phenomenon really expanded in the post-war period. Butlins and Pontins set this trend, but their popularity waned with the rise of overseas package tours and the increasing comforts to which visitors became accustomed at home. Towards the end of the 20th century this market has been revived by the upmarket inland resorts of Dutch company Center Parcs.

Cox & Co, the forebear of Cox & Kings were in existence from 1758 largely entwined with the travel arrangements for the British Army serving around the Empire. While acting as 'agents' for various regiments, they organised the payment, provision, clothing and travel arrangements for members of the armed forces. In the 19th century their network of offices contained a banking and also travel department. The company became heavily involved with affairs in India and its Shipping Agency had offices in France and the Middle East.

Other phenomena that helped develop the travel industry were paid holidays:

  • 1.5 million manual workers in Britain had paid holidays by 1925
  • 11 million by 1939 (30% of the population in families with paid holidays)

NGOs and government agencies may sometimes promote a specific region as a tourist destination, and support the development of a tourism industry in that area. The contemporary phenomenon of mass tourism may sometimes result in overdevelopment; alternative forms of tourism such as ecotourism seek to avoid such outcomes by pursuing tourism in a sustainable way.

Outside Britain

In the United States, the first great seaside resort, in the European style, was Atlantic City, New Jersey, and Long Island.

In Continental Europe, early resorts included Ostend (for the people of Brussels), and Boulogne-sur-Mer (Pas-de-Calais) and Deauville (Calvados) (for Parisians).

International mass tourism

Increasing speed on railways meant that the tourist industry could develop internationally. To this may be added the development of sea travel. By 1901, the number of people crossing the English Channel from England to France or Belgium had passed 0.5 million per year. Shipping companies were anxious to fill cabin space that was under utilised.

For example, P&O found that the majority of their passengers for India and the Far East joined the ship at Marseilles. Consequently, they marketed holidays based upon sea trips from London to Lisbon and Gibraltar. Other companies diverted their older ships to operate cruises in the summer months.

Sidon Sea Castle, Sidon in Lebanon
A view of the Torres del Paine National Park in Chile
A beach in Costa Rica.

However, the real age of international mass travel began with the growth of air travel after World War Two. In the immediate post-war period, there was a surplus of transport aircraft, such as the popular and reliable Douglas Dakota, and a number of ex military pilots ready to fly them. They were available for charter flights, and tour operators began to use them for European destinations, such as Paris and Ostend.

Vladimir Raitz pioneered modern package tourism when on 20 May 1950 his recently founded company, Horizon, provided arrangements for a two-week holiday in Corsica. For an all inclusive price of £32.10s.-, holiday makers could sleep under canvas, sample local wines and eat a meal containing meat twice a day - this was especially attractive due to the continuing austerity measures in post-war United Kingdom. Within ten years, his company had started mass tourism to Palma (1952), Lourdes (1953), Costa Brava (1954), Sardinia (1954), Minorca (1955), Porto (1956), Costa Blanca (1957) and Costa del Sol (1959).

However it was with cheap air travel in combination with the package tour that international mass tourism developed. The postwar introduction of an international system of airline regulation was another important factor. The bilateral agreements at the heart of the system fixed seat prices, and airlines could not fill blocks of empty seats on underused flights by discounting. But if they were purchased by a tour operator and hidden within the price of an inclusive holiday package, it would be difficult to prove that discounting had taken place - even though it was obvious that it had! This was the origin of the modern mass package tour.

These developments coincided with a significant increase in the standard of living in Britain. At the end of the 1950s, Harold Macmillan could say "you've never had it so good."

Another significant development also happened at the end of this decade. The devaluation of the Spanish peseta made Spain appear a particularly attractive destination. The cheapness of the cost of living attracted increasing numbers of visitors. Mass package tourism has at times been an exploitative process, in which tour operators in a country with a high standard of living make use of development opportunities and low operating costs in a country with a lower standard of living. However, as witness the development of many tourist areas in previously poor parts of the world, and the concomitant rise in standards of living, when there is equality of bargaining power, both parties can gain economic benefits from this arrangement.

Spain and the Balearic Islands became major tourist destinations, and development probably peaked in the 1980s. At the same time, British tour operators developed the Algarve in Portugal. The continuing search for new, cheaper, destinations spread mass tourism to the Greek Islands, Italy, Tunisia, Morocco, Turkey, and more recently Croatia.

For the worker living in greater London, Venice today is almost as accessible as Brighton was 100 years ago. Consequently, the British seaside resort experienced a marked decline from the 1970s onwards. Some, such as New Brighton, Merseyside have disappeared. Others have reinvented themselves, and now cater to daytrippers, the weekend break market or business conferences.

Recent developments

There has been an upmarket trend in tourism over the last few decades, especially in Europe where international travel for short breaks is common. Tourists have higher levels of disposable income and greater leisure time and they are also better-educated and have more sophisticated tastes. There is now a demand for a better quality products, which has resulted in a fragmenting of the mass market for beach vacations; people want more specialised versions, such as 'Club 18 -30', quieter resorts, family-oriented holidays, or niche market-targeted destination hotels. As well, people are taking second short break holidays.

The developments in technology and transport infrastructure such as jumbo jets and low-budget airlines have made many types of tourism more affordable. There have also been changes in lifestyle, such as retiree-age people who living as a tourist all the year round. This is facilitated by internet purchasing of tourism products. Some sites have now started to offer dynamic packaging, in which an inclusive price is quoted for a tailor- made package requested by the customer upon impulse.

There have been a few setbacks in tourism, such as the September 11, 2001 attacks and terrorist threats to tourist destinations such as Bali and European cities. Some of the tourist destinations, including the beach resorts of Cancún have lost popularity due to shifting tastes. In this context, the excessive building and environmental destruction often associated with traditional "sun and beach" tourism may contribute to a destination's saturation and subsequent decline. Spain's Costa Brava, a popular 1960s and 1970s beach location is now facing a crisis in its tourist industry.

Sustainable tourism is becoming more popular as people start to realize the devastating effects poorly planned tourism can have on communities. Receptive tourism is now growing at a very rapid rate in many developing countries, where it is often the most important economic activity in local GDP.

In recent years, second holidays or vacations have become more popular as people's discretionary income increases. Typical combinations are a package to the typical mass tourist resort, with a winter skiing holiday or weekend break to a city or national park. On December 26, 2004 a tsunami, caused by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake hit Asian countries bordering the Indian Ocean, and also the Maldives. Tens of thousands of lives were lost, and many tourists died. This, together with the vast clean-up operation in place, has stopped or severely hampered tourism to the area.

The terms tourism and travel are sometimes used interchangeably. In this context travel has a similar definition to tourism, but implies a more purposeful journey. The terms tourism and tourist are sometimes used pejoratively, to imply a shallow interest in the cultures or locations visited by tourists.

Niche tourism

Physical activity or sports-oriented niche tourism includes adventure tourism such as mountaineering and hiking (tramping); Backpacker Tourism; Sport travel to do skiing, golf and scuba diving or see a sports event (e.g., FIFA World Cup); and extreme tourism for people interested in risky activities.

Learning-oriented niche tourism includes audio tourism and audio walking tours; bookstore tourism, in which travellers visit independent bookstores; creative tourism workshops; educational tourism for classes; ancestry tourism, to visit birth places; Hobby tourism (such as garden tours, amateur radio DX-peditions, or square dance cruises).

Lifestyle-oriented niche tourism types include Gay tourism; Gourmet tourism; Wine tourism; Health tourism; Medical tourism; Inclusive tourism for people with disabilities;Mystical tourism (e.g., involving Meditation, yoga,and rituals).

Miscellaneous types




Armchair tourism and virtual tourism: not traveling physically, but exploring the world through internet, books, TV, etc

Trends

The World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) forecasts that international tourism will continue growing at the average annual rate of 4 %.[3] By 2020 Europe will remain the most popular destination, but its share will drop from 60 % in 1995 to 46 %. Long-haul will grow slightly faster than intraregional travel and by 2020 its share will increase from 18 % in 1995 to 24 %.

With the advent of e-commerce, tourism products have become one of the most traded items on the internet. Tourism products and services have been made available through intermediaries, although tourism providers (hotels, airlines, etc.) can sell their services directly. This has put pressure on intermediaries from both on-line and traditional shops.

It has been suggested there is a strong correlation between Tourism expenditure per capita and the degree to which countries play in the global context[4]. Not only as a result of the important economic contribution of the tourism industry, but also as an indicator of the degree of confidence with which global citizens leverage the resources of the globe for the benefit of their local economies. This is why any projections of growth in tourism may serve as an indication of the relative influence that each country will exercise in the future.

Space tourism is expected to "take off" in the first quarter of the 21st century, although compared with traditional destinations the number of tourists in orbit will remain low until technologies such as a space elevator make space travel cheap.

Technological improvement is likely to make possible air-ship hotels, based either on solar-powered airplanes or large dirigibles. Underwater hotels, such as Hydropolis, expected to open in Dubai in 2006, will be built. On the ocean tourists will be welcomed by ever larger cruise ships and perhaps floating cities.

Some futurists expect that movable hotel "pods" will be created that could be temporarily erected anywhere on the planet, where building a permanent resort would be unacceptable politically, economically or environmentally.

See also

References

  1. ^ "World's top 25 tourist destinations" (PDF). World Tourism. 2005.
  2. ^ Werner Hunziker and Kurt (1941). Grundriss der allgemeinen Fremdenverkehrslehre. OCLC # 69064371.
  3. ^ "Long-term Prospects: Tourism 2020 Vision". World Tourism. 2004.
  4. ^ "airports & tourists". Global Culture. 2007.

External links

  • United Nations World Tourism Organisation "A specialized agency of the United Nations, is the leading international organization in the field of tourism. It serves as a global forum for tourism policy issues and practical source of tourism know-how."