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In This Article Expand or collapse the "in this article" section Tourism Geography

Introduction, general overviews.

  • Progress in Human Geography Reports
  • The Institutional Environment Shaping Tourism Geography Education
  • Culture and Heritage Tourism
  • Tourism and Agriculture
  • Economic Geography and Tourism
  • Migration and Mobilities
  • Destination Place Branding

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Tourism Geography by Deborah Che LAST REVIEWED: 27 April 2017 LAST MODIFIED: 27 April 2017 DOI: 10.1093/obo/9780199874002-0156

Geography is the ideal discipline for studying the global tourism industry; as the key journal Tourism Geographies (under Journals ) explains, there are many fundamentally geographical aspects to tourism which (1) “occurs in places, (2) is sold and begins in a place of origin and is consumed in destination places, (3) transforms the environment of visited places in ways that are distinct from non-tourism processes, (4) involves the movement of people, goods, services, ideas, and money over space, and (5) presents a distinct way that people view, understand and relate to the world.” Given the inherently spatial aspects of tourism, geographers have contributed significantly to academic tourism studies. They have developed some of the most important conceptual models for explaining tourism development, including resort morphology, the tourist-historic city, and the tourist area life cycle. Additionally geographers have made the most sustained contributions to the study of the environmental dimensions of tourism and have been major contributors to the concepts of sustainable tourism and Ecotourism . Even though it has been at the core of tourism studies and also strengthened geography department enrollments, tourism geography ironically has been somewhat peripheral in academic geography. This status may be due in part to the inertia of academic institutions and staff in not seeing tourism as a serious subject for study, as well as the difficulty in measuring the tourism industry as compared to primary and secondary industries. This bibliography highlights the contributions of tourism geography and geographers to tourism research and education through a review of general overviews, Handbooks , Journals , Progress in Human Geography Reports , and Textbooks and publications on Tourism Geography Education , as well as those on specific topical areas including Culture and Heritage Tourism , Sustainability and Tourism , Migration and Mobilities , Economic Geography and Tourism , and Destination Place Branding .

The sources in this section provide overviews of tourism geography and are references to the extensive literature reviewed. Butler 2004 interweaves personal experiences from Butler’s academic career in geography in Canada and tourism management in the UK in discussing geographical research on tourism before 1950, from 1950–1980 and post-1980 to the early 21st century. His earlier contributions primarily concerned environmental aspects of tourism such as sustainable development, carrying capacity, and limits to use, while his later work diversified into areas including mobilities and movement, regional development, and cultural topics. Hall 2013 reviews contemporary tourism geography and argues that the subdiscipline has been a significant contributor to the melding and hybridity of geographic binaries, especially in the development of more critical applied geographies of environmental change. Hall and Page 2009 identifies themes emerging from the research of geographers, including explaining spatialities, tourism planning and places, development and its critiques, tourism as an “applied” area of research, and future prospects in the development of spatiality in tourism research. Focusing on the state of North American tourism geography, Meyer-Arendt and Lew 2003 highlights the research themes and approaches of members of the Recreation, Tourism and Sport specialty group of the Association of American Geographers. In contrast to the former pieces, which largely focus on tourism geography research published in English, Kreisel 2004 provides an insight into the German geographical research on tourism and leisure which—with the exception of Christaller’s application of his central places theory to tourism and his hypothesis that zones more distant from urban and industrial agglomerations were more favorable for tourism development—is largely unfamiliar to non-German readers. Likewise, Lazzarotti 2002 reviews French tourism geography research outside the Anglo-American dominated academic literature. The general overviews in Butler 2004 , Hall 2013 , and Hall and Page 2009 note that while geography has been foundational to tourism studies, with over one-third of the most cited tourism scholars from 1970–2007 having graduate qualifications in geography ( Hall and Page 2009 ), tourism has been marginalized in academic geography, with few positions in geography departments and barely a mention in key publications on the history of geographical thought. Likewise Butler 2004 (see also Sustainability and Tourism ) found hardly any articles on tourism and recreation were published in the leading geographical journals from 1950–1990. While the 1970s embargo on tourism research at the Annals of the Association of American Geographers ended with a change in editors and policy ( Butler 2004 ), tourism research has remained relatively peripheral in geography as contrasted to geography’s core status within tourism.

Butler, Richard. “Geographical Research on Tourism, Recreation, and Leisure: Origins, Eras, and Directions.” Tourism Geographies 6.2 (2004): 143–162.

DOI: 10.1080/1461668042000208453

Draws on the author’s four-decade involvement in the field of leisure, recreation, and tourism. Uniquely interweaves personal narratives in discussing the diverse research emphases and contributions by geographers; the explosion in tourism programs (mainly in business and management schools); and future contributions possible if a strong spatial focus and a synthesizing approach are maintained.

Hall, C. Michael. “Framing Tourism Geography: Notes from the Underground.” Annals of Tourism Research 43 (2013): 601–623.

DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2013.06.007

While noting the context in which tourism geography operates as a foundational discipline to the study of tourism (although perceived as marginal to institutional geography) the article argues that tourism geography has been a significant contributor to bridging geographic binaries, including the applied versus theoretical and physical versus human.

Hall, C. M., and S. J. Page. “Progress in Tourism Management: From the Geography of Tourism to Geographies of Tourism—A Review.” Tourism Management 30.1 (2009): 3–16.

DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2008.05.014

Provides a review of the state of tourism geography thirty years from when the journal first began publishing articles by geographers; especially timely given the subdiscipline is at a crossroads with the retirement of those who contributed significantly to tourism studies and the emergence of a new generation of tourism geographers.

Kreisel, Werner. “Geography of Leisure and Tourism Research in the German-speaking World: Three Pillars to Progress.” Tourism Geographies 6.2 (2004): 163–185.

DOI: 10.1080/1461668042000208435

This article provides an insight into German-language research in this subdiscipline, from Hans Poser’s 1939 on landscape and tourism regions to current applied foci on sustainable tourism, including strategic resource and quality management planning and the transformation of former industrial landscapes for recreation, leisure, and tourism.

Lazzarotti, Olivier. “French Tourism Geographies: A Review.” Tourism Geographies 4.2 (2002): 135–147.

DOI: 10.1080/14616680210124909

This article provides an historical overview of the French geographical literature on tourism since the end of the 19th century, which has been hampered by academic institutional assumptions of what is/is not geography.

Meyer-Arendt, Klaus J., and Alan A. Lew. “Recreation, Tourism and Sport.” In Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21 st Century . Edited by Gary L. Gaile and Cort J. Willmott, 526–542. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

A useful overview that identifies the broad tourism geography themes and approaches in which recreation, tourism and sport academics have published, including travel; historical tourism; perception; environmental aspects; destination studies; specialized tourism including cultural, farm, and rural tourism and resorts and marketing; and economic aspects of tourism.

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Tourism Geography

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The diversity of natural conditions in China has created numerous types of natural landscapes in a wide variety of forms, and the history of civilization for more than 5000 years has left numerous historical relics, providing a material and cultural basis for the development of tourism resources. China is one of the countries with the most complete categories of world heritage and the most natural and cultural heritage sites in the world. Tourism products represented by Chinese tea culture, gold, stone, calligraphy, and painting, the four treasures of literature and food culture, have a long history and have become the bright pearl in the cultural treasury of the Chinese nation. This chapter focuses on China’s natural and cultural heritage, tourism subdivisions and attractions, etc., providing a basis for understanding the development of tourism in China.

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Wang, J., Liang, S., Shi, P. (2022). Tourism Geography. In: The Geography of Contemporary China . World Regional Geography Book Series. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-04158-7_14

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GEOGRAPHY OF TOURISM

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Week – I 1. Introduction to Geography | 2.Geography  and  Tourism | 3.Geography  of  Travel | 4.Classification of Resources |

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Week – III -9. Tourism Attractions in Thailand and Malaysia |10. Tourism in Gulf Countries: Part I |11. Tourism in Gulf countries Part - II |12. Tourism in South East Asia: Part – I |

Week - IV -13. Tourism in South East Asia: Part – II |14.Tourist attractions and activities in Egypt, Kenya and Uganda | 15.Tourist attractions in South Africa and emerging Tourist Destinations in Africa |16. North America |

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  1. Tourism geography

    Tourism geography is that branch of human geography that deals with the study of travel and its impact on places. Geography is fundamental to the study of tourism, because tourism is geographical in nature. Tourism occurs in places, it involves movement and activities between places and it is an activity in which both place characteristics and ...

  2. Tourism Geography

    Introduction. Geography is the ideal discipline for studying the global tourism industry; as the key journal Tourism Geographies (under Journals) explains, there are many fundamentally geographical aspects to tourism which (1) "occurs in places, (2) is sold and begins in a place of origin and is consumed in destination places, (3) transforms the environment of visited places in ways that are ...

  3. What is Tourism Geography?

    Tourism is essentially a geographical phenomenon, regarding the transfer of people and services through space and time, so a special domain dedicated to the research of the interconnections between tourism and geography was inevitable. Although the scientific field is new, the connections of geography and travel can be traced to ancient times ...

  4. Part I

    Chapter 1 - Tourism, geography and geographies of tourism. Modern tourism is bringing Increasing numbers of tourists worldwide, both international and domestic, resulting in increasing social, economic and environmental impacts on at multiple geographic scales. Tourist motivations reflect a variety of needs and shape tourist decision making and ...

  5. Tourism Geographies

    Tourism Geographies is a peer-reviewed journal which explores tourism and tourism-related areas of recreation and leisure studies from a geographic perspective. This journal brings together academic and applied research and regional traditions from around the world, including multi-disciplinary approaches from geography and related fields such as anthropology and other social sciences ...

  6. Tourism Geography

    Tourism Geography develops a critical understanding of how different geographies of tourism are created and maintained. Drawing on both historical and contemporary perspectives, the discussion connects tourism to key geographical concepts relating to globalization, mobility, new geographies of production and consumption, and post-industrial change.

  7. Geography of Tourism

    Geography of Tourism. From a general perspective, geographers study the earth as the home of human beings and explore the interrelationships between them and their environments from a diversity of scales. As such, tourism has been one of their interests for almost a century. There has always been a close relationship among tourism, travel ...

  8. PDF An Introduction to the Geography of Tourism

    7 The Human Geography of Tourism: Resources and Barriers . 137 Cultural Geography and Tourism 137 Urban Geography, Rural Geography, and Tourism 141 Urban Geography and Tourism 144 Rural Geography and Tourism , 147 Political Geography and Tourism \ 150 Conclusion 152.. Key Terms 152 Notes 155 Sources 155 PART III: THE GEOGRAPHY OF TOURISM ...

  9. Tourism Geography

    Tourism is an intensely geographic phenomenon. It stimulates large-scale, global movement of people and forges distinctive relationships between people and the places they visit. It shapes processes of physical development and resource exploitation, whilst the presence of visitors exerts a range of economic, social, cultural and environmental ...

  10. Introduction

    This third edition of Tourism Geography: Critical Understandings of Place, Space and Experience presents an essential understanding of critical perspectives on how tourism places and spaces are created and maintained. Drawing on the holistic nature of geography, a range of social science disciplinary views are presented, including both historical and contemporary perspectives.

  11. The Routledge Handbook of Tourism Geographies

    Written by leading scholars in the tourism geographies field, this text will provide an invaluable resource for all those with an interest in tourism geographies, encouraging dialogue across disciplinary boundaries and areas of study. Geographical analysis of tourism spaces and places is advancing fast. In terms of human geography, the various ...

  12. TOURISM GEOGRAPHIES

    Welcome to the home of Tourism Geographies. 1. Links to Tourism Geographies articles (1999-present) 2. Information for Tourism Geographies authors and referees. 3. Current Special Issues and Proposal submission guidelines. 4. Information on Tourism Geographic - A sister publication.

  13. TYPES OF TOURISM

    Contents hide 1 Introduction 2 Types of Tourism 2.1 Adventure Tourism 2.2 Cultural Tourism 2.3 Eco-Tourism 2.4 Medical Tourism 2.5 Beach Tourism 2.6 Religious Tourism 2.7 Business Tourism 2.8 Sports Tourism 2.9 Educational Tourism 2.10 Heritage Tourism 2.11 Culinary Tourism 3 Other Types of Tourism 3.1 Annual Holiday Tourism 3.2 Pleasure Tourism 3.3 Relaxation; Rest […]

  14. Tourism

    tourism, the act and process of spending time away from home in pursuit of recreation, relaxation, and pleasure, while making use of the commercial provision of services.As such, tourism is a product of modern social arrangements, beginning in western Europe in the 17th century, although it has antecedents in Classical antiquity.. Tourism is distinguished from exploration in that tourists ...

  15. Full article: Geography: the substance of tourism

    The simultaneity of space and time, and production and consumption are what requires geographical input. Geography defines destinations, market hinterlands, ecological sensitivities and socio-cultural values. It determines access to places, who is able to travel, and how societies value their pasts and their presents.

  16. Tourism Geography

    Tourism is an explicit geographical phenomenon that encompasses the movement of people, for leisure-related purposes, between origin and destination (s). As Pearce (1979) states, movement is the basic element of tourism, and no other discipline concentrates on spatial patterns of tourism phenomena as geography (Mitchell & Murphy, 1991).

  17. Part One: The Elements of the Geography of Travel and Tourism

    Chapter List Chapter 1: An introduction to the geography of travel and tourism Chapter 2: The geography of demand for tourism Chapter 3: The geography of resources for tourism Chapter 4: Climate and tourism Chapter 5: The geography of transport for travel and tourism Learning Objectives After reading this chapter, you should be able to: Define and use the terms leisure, recreation and tourism ...

  18. (PDF) Geography of Tourism

    A type of accommodation required by tourists depends on. their lives-styles, standard of living, the capacity to spend. ... Tourism geography is examined from environmental, regional, spatial, and ...

  19. Tourism Geography

    Scenic spots and tourism products constitute a symbol of tourism geography and an essential part of the tourism industry. ... From raw materials imports to ex-work, a brush generally requires more than 120 small processes. Each type of lake pen has a sharp tip, even and neatly cut, providing a round (rich and smooth) and robust style. Fig. 14.61.

  20. What is tourism?

    Tourism is a service industry which employs over 2 million people in Britain. Tourism is an industry that drives people to travel for leisure and recreation. The growth of tourism has had a dramatic effect on many countries - not just economically, but also environmentally and socially. These impacts have been both positive and negative.

  21. Geotourism

    Geotourism is defined as tourism that sustains or enhances the distinctive geographical character of a place—its environment, heritage, aesthetics, culture, and the well-being of its residents.

  22. GEOGRAPHY OF TOURISM

    Fundamentals of geography and its linkages with tourism. 356. National Geographic Learning's Visual Geography of Travel and Tourism. Harssel, Jackson and Hudman (2014) Reference book. Geography of important tourist destinations around the world. 640. Geography of Travel and Tourism. Dr.ChaturbhujMamoria and Komal Singh. Text

  23. Types of Tourists

    3.4 Unusual. 3.5 Incipient Mass. 3.6 Mass. 3.7 Charter. 4 Frequency of types of tourists and their adaptations to local norms (Smith, 1977b) 5 Share this Knowladge: 6 Like this: A tourist is a person who travels to a place outside of their usual residence for leisure, recreation, or business purposes. They typically stay for a short period ...