Sex Tourism examines the issues which emerge from sex worker-client interactions and from tourists visiting 'sex destinations'. It is a comprehensive summary of past research by academics and original research by the authors.
Using international case studies, this book looks at the factors which influence government tourism policy-making. It provides a framework for the study of tourism policy, contains chapter summaries, international case studies, a guide to further reading and questions for discussion.
This groundbreaking volume provides an overview of relevant innovation theories and related literatures on productivity and competitiveness, and their significance to contemporary tourism practices.
Offers a comprehensive review of innovation in tourism, while also considering how tourism itself contributes to innovative local, regional and national development strategies. This book places tourism innovation in the context of academic and policy concerns relating to knowledge, competition, and the management of change.
Providing the first comprehensive analysis of the economic, social and political interrelationships between global environmental change and tourism, this book integrates social and physical science perspectives to give an in-depth exploration of this topical issue.