If you’re planning a holiday to the UK, looking for hotels and accommodation in Britain, or simply after UK travel, attractions or events information, VisitBritain.com has everything you need to know.
Britain is easy to do on a budget. Check out our low-cost attractions and events, cheap accommodation and free days out. There’s never been a better time to visit and with our 100s of special offers, you’ll save even more.
http://www.visitbritain.co.uk/
Visit England
On top of the 20 days holiday most of us get each year, there are also hundreds of evenings, Saturdays and Sundays and hours of lunch breaks to fill.
http://www.enjoyengland.com/about/
“A healthy natural environment is really important to all of us. But it’s increasingly under pressure from climate change, pollution and the demand for land. Natural England play a vital role in conserving and protecting our environment and wildlife, and I wish them all the best in their work.”
So whether it’s a lunch break, a couple of hours in the evening or an entire weekend, why not treat every trip like it’s a holiday. Search below for hundreds of ideas and great offers.
Natural England is here to conserve and enhance the natural environment, for its intrinsic value, the wellbeing and enjoyment of people and the economic prosperity that it brings
http://www.naturalengland.org.uk/
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The Relationship Between Ecotourism and Sustainable Tourism
by linkroll
posted in Travel and Leisure
There is a very important relationship that lies between ecotourism and sustainable tourism and which you should be aware of. Only when you learn about ecotourism and sustainable tourism are you really going to be able to travel safely and environmentally friendly in the future, so global sustainable tourism is a subject that everyone should be well educated on before traveling anywhere.
The Details
When it comes to ecotourism and sustainable tourism there are a few things in particular that are important to know. For one, you have to realize that while there are differences and similarities between the two, ecotourism and sustainable tourism both really represent their own issue and so you need to be aware of this.
Sustainable tourism is that which is often considered as being relatable to nature and takes into consideration everything from host peoples to communities and cultures.
Then there is ecotourism which is similar but again there are some major differences, of which note really has to be taken here. This is actually a relatively new idea that really has all the attention on it lately. It is of such interest to people that it has been in the public eye for the past couple of years for sure.
Everyone seems to be talking about ecotourism, although if you take a look at just a few years ago, you would see that it was hardly talked about at all back them. This is a specialized market that is important to learn about before you travel anywhere in the world and have the best time.
There are always new studies that are taking place on ecotourism and sustainable tourism and which keep us updated on the different occurrences that are taking place in regards to these two subjects. If you really want to stay informed here, then the best thing that you can do is use the Internet as your main resource.
Here you will be able to find all the information that you need on ecotourism and sustainable tourism, and so whether you are learning this because you have to, for instance for educational purposes or just because you want to, this is a great way to stay up to date on all information that is relevant here.
As you can see, there is a great importance to both ecotourism and sustainable tourism and which you should be aware of so that you can learn more and understand about these subjects.
http://www.linkroll.com/Travel-and-Leisure--88826-The-Relationship-Between-Ecotourism-and-Sustainable-Tourism.html
Wednesday, 1 July 2009
Monday, 22 June 2009
MAJOR ISSUES IN TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN THE ASIAN AND PACIFIC REGION
MAJOR ISSUES IN TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN THE ASIAN AND PACIFIC REGION
Introduction
1. Tourism is one of the most important economic activities in the world today, because it directly generates services, products, foreign currency, employment and investments. In countries where tourism has become a flourishing service industry, it has a far-reaching economic and social impact on national development. International tourism also has complex linkages to other industries and to government development strategies and plans, which means that it affects the structure and diversity of other economic activities at the national and regional levels.
2. In 2003, international tourism receipts represented approximately 6 per cent of worldwide exports of goods and services; the share of tourism as part of service exports increased to nearly 30 per cent. In terms of growth, the tourism industry worldwide had been stagnant since 2000, but made a strong recovery throughout 2004. At the end of 2004 and in early 2005, the devastation caused by the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami had a significant impact on several important Asian tourism destinations.
3. A number of international and regional forces beyond direct government or private sector control, as well as extraordinary disruptions and crises, have produced a fast-changing variety of complex patterns for international tourism in the region. This document considers major issues and challenges in the tourism sector in terms of sustainable development over the long term, and in terms
of crisis and risk management for the Asian and Pacific tourism industry.
I. OVERVIEW OF TOURISM IN THE ASIAN AND PACIFIC REGION
A. Overview of the current situation
4. A variety of patterns have characterized recent international tourism trends for Asia and the Pacific in terms of receipts and the number of tourist arrivals. According to the World Tourism Organization, the value of worldwide tourism receipts was US$ 622 billion in 2004. Asia and the Pacific earned 20 per cent of that amount, or about US$ 124 billion. Tourism industry receipts in Asia and the Pacific showed an impressive yearly growth rate of 24 per cent as compared with the world growth rate of 10 per cent. However, this represented recovery for the region from a decline in 2003(-9.4 per cent) owing to the effects of SARS.
5. In 2004, the total number of international tourists worldwide grew by 10.7 per cent to a total of 763 million arrivals. The annual growth rate for arrivals in Asia and the Pacific was 27.8 per cent, numbering 152.9 million international tourists, or about 20 per cent of the world total. North-East Asia recorded 29.5 per cent growth in international tourist arrivals and South-East Asia 30.6 per cent
growth in 2004 after a decrease of 13.7 per cent in 2003. Arrivals in South Asia grew by 16.5 per cent in 2004 and by 12.4 per cent in Oceania.
6. While tourism demand in Asia and the Pacific recovered in 2004, receipts grew somewhat more slowly than the volume of arrivals. This is related to the changing patterns of travel, which have shown a trend towards higher frequency shorter-stay trips with reduced spending by tourists, as a result of increased intraregional tourism. This trend was compounded by more competitive prices due to the entry of new low-cost airlines offering additional domestic and subregional routes. In terms of arrivals in 2004, China ranked fourth among the top 10 tourism destinations worldwide and Hong Kong, China, seventh.
At the same time, in terms of international tourism receipts, China ranked
seventh and Turkey eighth among the top 10 countries. Independent travel has been developing faster than conventional package tours, although many destinations, especially in South-East Asia, expect to benefit from the fast growth of the outbound Chinese tourism market.
7. The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) has estimated the contribution of tourism to socio-economic development using the tourism satellite account methodology. In 2004, travel and tourism worldwide was expected to generate total demand of US$ 5,490 billion with a direct impact that included 73.7 million jobs (2.8 per cent of total employment) and a contribution to gross domestic
product (GDP) of US$ 1,542 billion (3.8 per cent of aggregate world GDP).
8. The travel and tourism industry also has an indirect effect on all other sectors of the economy.
In 2004, travel and tourism worldwide accounted for US$ 1,289.8 billion (12.2 per cent) of all service and merchandise exports, US$ 802.3 billion (9.4 per cent) of global capital investment and US$ 265.3 billion (3.9 per cent) of government expenditure worldwide.
9. In 2004, the forecast for real growth in the industry worldwide was 5.9 per cent for total demand, 5.2 per cent for direct growth in GDP and 4.6 per cent for direct growth in employment. In terms of the regional distribution of total worldwide demand, North-East Asia, South-East Asia and South Asia ranked third, fourth and seventh respectively among the top nine regions in 2004. Compared with the world average for real growth of total demand in 2004 (5.9 per cent), all three main regions of Asia showed higher than average growth of demand: 10.4 per cent for South-East Asia, 9.9 per cent for South Asia and 6.6 per cent for North-East Asia.
10. The values for travel and tourism GDP showed a similar pattern. North-East Asia, South-East Asia and South Asia ranked third, fourth and seventh respectively in 2004. In terms of the GDP share, tourism in North-East Asia ranked fifth out of nine regions at 9.3 per cent, South-East Asia seventh at 7.4 per cent and South Asia ninth at 5.0 per cent. The GDP shares for the three regions were below the
world average of 10.4 per cent.
11. WTTC has reported on total (direct and indirect) travel and tourism employment in terms of number of jobs for the top nine regions of the world. Tourism worldwide was expected to create almost 215 million jobs in 2004, with North-East Asia accounting for the biggest share worldwide, at almost 72 million jobs; South Asia ranked second, with about 30 million jobs, and South-East Asia fifth, with about 20 million. In terms of the share of tourism in total employment for 2004, the global average was 8.1 per cent. In terms of the share of tourism in total employment for Asia, North-East Asia recorded 8.5 per cent, South-East Asia 8.1 per cent and South Asia 5.2 per cent.
http://www.unescap.org/ttdw/common/Meetings/STD/STD_2E.pdf
Introduction
1. Tourism is one of the most important economic activities in the world today, because it directly generates services, products, foreign currency, employment and investments. In countries where tourism has become a flourishing service industry, it has a far-reaching economic and social impact on national development. International tourism also has complex linkages to other industries and to government development strategies and plans, which means that it affects the structure and diversity of other economic activities at the national and regional levels.
2. In 2003, international tourism receipts represented approximately 6 per cent of worldwide exports of goods and services; the share of tourism as part of service exports increased to nearly 30 per cent. In terms of growth, the tourism industry worldwide had been stagnant since 2000, but made a strong recovery throughout 2004. At the end of 2004 and in early 2005, the devastation caused by the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami had a significant impact on several important Asian tourism destinations.
3. A number of international and regional forces beyond direct government or private sector control, as well as extraordinary disruptions and crises, have produced a fast-changing variety of complex patterns for international tourism in the region. This document considers major issues and challenges in the tourism sector in terms of sustainable development over the long term, and in terms
of crisis and risk management for the Asian and Pacific tourism industry.
I. OVERVIEW OF TOURISM IN THE ASIAN AND PACIFIC REGION
A. Overview of the current situation
4. A variety of patterns have characterized recent international tourism trends for Asia and the Pacific in terms of receipts and the number of tourist arrivals. According to the World Tourism Organization, the value of worldwide tourism receipts was US$ 622 billion in 2004. Asia and the Pacific earned 20 per cent of that amount, or about US$ 124 billion. Tourism industry receipts in Asia and the Pacific showed an impressive yearly growth rate of 24 per cent as compared with the world growth rate of 10 per cent. However, this represented recovery for the region from a decline in 2003(-9.4 per cent) owing to the effects of SARS.
5. In 2004, the total number of international tourists worldwide grew by 10.7 per cent to a total of 763 million arrivals. The annual growth rate for arrivals in Asia and the Pacific was 27.8 per cent, numbering 152.9 million international tourists, or about 20 per cent of the world total. North-East Asia recorded 29.5 per cent growth in international tourist arrivals and South-East Asia 30.6 per cent
growth in 2004 after a decrease of 13.7 per cent in 2003. Arrivals in South Asia grew by 16.5 per cent in 2004 and by 12.4 per cent in Oceania.
6. While tourism demand in Asia and the Pacific recovered in 2004, receipts grew somewhat more slowly than the volume of arrivals. This is related to the changing patterns of travel, which have shown a trend towards higher frequency shorter-stay trips with reduced spending by tourists, as a result of increased intraregional tourism. This trend was compounded by more competitive prices due to the entry of new low-cost airlines offering additional domestic and subregional routes. In terms of arrivals in 2004, China ranked fourth among the top 10 tourism destinations worldwide and Hong Kong, China, seventh.
At the same time, in terms of international tourism receipts, China ranked
seventh and Turkey eighth among the top 10 countries. Independent travel has been developing faster than conventional package tours, although many destinations, especially in South-East Asia, expect to benefit from the fast growth of the outbound Chinese tourism market.
7. The World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) has estimated the contribution of tourism to socio-economic development using the tourism satellite account methodology. In 2004, travel and tourism worldwide was expected to generate total demand of US$ 5,490 billion with a direct impact that included 73.7 million jobs (2.8 per cent of total employment) and a contribution to gross domestic
product (GDP) of US$ 1,542 billion (3.8 per cent of aggregate world GDP).
8. The travel and tourism industry also has an indirect effect on all other sectors of the economy.
In 2004, travel and tourism worldwide accounted for US$ 1,289.8 billion (12.2 per cent) of all service and merchandise exports, US$ 802.3 billion (9.4 per cent) of global capital investment and US$ 265.3 billion (3.9 per cent) of government expenditure worldwide.
9. In 2004, the forecast for real growth in the industry worldwide was 5.9 per cent for total demand, 5.2 per cent for direct growth in GDP and 4.6 per cent for direct growth in employment. In terms of the regional distribution of total worldwide demand, North-East Asia, South-East Asia and South Asia ranked third, fourth and seventh respectively among the top nine regions in 2004. Compared with the world average for real growth of total demand in 2004 (5.9 per cent), all three main regions of Asia showed higher than average growth of demand: 10.4 per cent for South-East Asia, 9.9 per cent for South Asia and 6.6 per cent for North-East Asia.
10. The values for travel and tourism GDP showed a similar pattern. North-East Asia, South-East Asia and South Asia ranked third, fourth and seventh respectively in 2004. In terms of the GDP share, tourism in North-East Asia ranked fifth out of nine regions at 9.3 per cent, South-East Asia seventh at 7.4 per cent and South Asia ninth at 5.0 per cent. The GDP shares for the three regions were below the
world average of 10.4 per cent.
11. WTTC has reported on total (direct and indirect) travel and tourism employment in terms of number of jobs for the top nine regions of the world. Tourism worldwide was expected to create almost 215 million jobs in 2004, with North-East Asia accounting for the biggest share worldwide, at almost 72 million jobs; South Asia ranked second, with about 30 million jobs, and South-East Asia fifth, with about 20 million. In terms of the share of tourism in total employment for 2004, the global average was 8.1 per cent. In terms of the share of tourism in total employment for Asia, North-East Asia recorded 8.5 per cent, South-East Asia 8.1 per cent and South Asia 5.2 per cent.
http://www.unescap.org/ttdw/common/Meetings/STD/STD_2E.pdf
Pro-Poor Tourism Strategies: Making Tourism Work For The Poor:A review of experience
Pro-Poor Tourism Strategies: Making Tourism Work For The Poor:A review of experience
Caroline Ashley, Dilys Roe and Harold Goodwin
This report reviews practical experience of ‘pro-poor tourism strategies’ in order to identify useful lessons and good practice. It synthesises findings from 6 case studies of pro-poor tourism interventions, in South Africa, Namibia, Uganda, St Lucia, Ecuador and Nepal.
What is pro-poor tourism?
Pro-poor tourism (PPT) interventions aim to increase the net benefits for the poor from tourism, and ensure that tourism growth contributes to poverty reduction. PPT is not a specific product or sector of tourism, but an approach. PPT strategies aim to unlock opportunities for the poor – whether for economic gain, other livelihood benefits, or participation in decision-making.
Pro-poor tourism overlaps with, but is different from, the ‘sustainable tourism’ agenda. PPT focuses more on countries of the South, not on mainstream destinations in the North. Poverty is the core focus, rather than one element of (mainly environmental) sustainability.
Why focus tourism on poverty?
Poverty reduction is not usually at the heart of the tourism agenda. Yet tourism is significant in many poor countries and is already affecting the livelihoods of millions of poor people, positively and negatively. Poverty reduction requires pro-poor growth. Concerted effort is needed to maximise the contribution of tourism to this.
An overview of PPT strategies: what, who, how?
A wide range of actions are needed to increase benefits to the poor from tourism. These go well beyond simply promoting community tourism, although work at the grass-roots level to develop enterprises and local capacity is one key component. Efforts are also needed on marketing, employment opportunities, linkages with the established private sector, policy and regulation, and participation in decision-making. This involves working across levels and stakeholders. The focus and scale of PPT interventions vary enormously: from one private enterprise seeking to expand economic opportunities for poor neighbours, to a national programme enhancing participation by the poor
at all levels. Strategies can be broadly grouped into three types: expanding economic benefits for the poor; addressing non-economic impacts; and developing pro-poor policies/processes/partnerships.
Impacts on the poor
Emerging – though limited – indications of the impacts of the current PPT initiatives suggest that for the poor, where it happens, PPT interventions are invaluable. A few are lifted out of income-poverty while many more earn critical gap-filling income. More still are affected by non-financial livelihood benefits. These are very significant though highly varied; they include improved access to information and infrastructure, pride and cultural reinforcement. While some initiatives are yet to deliver on the ground, there are a few that affect hundreds directly and thousands indirectly.
http://www.propoortourism.org.uk/ppt_report.pdf
Caroline Ashley, Dilys Roe and Harold Goodwin
This report reviews practical experience of ‘pro-poor tourism strategies’ in order to identify useful lessons and good practice. It synthesises findings from 6 case studies of pro-poor tourism interventions, in South Africa, Namibia, Uganda, St Lucia, Ecuador and Nepal.
What is pro-poor tourism?
Pro-poor tourism (PPT) interventions aim to increase the net benefits for the poor from tourism, and ensure that tourism growth contributes to poverty reduction. PPT is not a specific product or sector of tourism, but an approach. PPT strategies aim to unlock opportunities for the poor – whether for economic gain, other livelihood benefits, or participation in decision-making.
Pro-poor tourism overlaps with, but is different from, the ‘sustainable tourism’ agenda. PPT focuses more on countries of the South, not on mainstream destinations in the North. Poverty is the core focus, rather than one element of (mainly environmental) sustainability.
Why focus tourism on poverty?
Poverty reduction is not usually at the heart of the tourism agenda. Yet tourism is significant in many poor countries and is already affecting the livelihoods of millions of poor people, positively and negatively. Poverty reduction requires pro-poor growth. Concerted effort is needed to maximise the contribution of tourism to this.
An overview of PPT strategies: what, who, how?
A wide range of actions are needed to increase benefits to the poor from tourism. These go well beyond simply promoting community tourism, although work at the grass-roots level to develop enterprises and local capacity is one key component. Efforts are also needed on marketing, employment opportunities, linkages with the established private sector, policy and regulation, and participation in decision-making. This involves working across levels and stakeholders. The focus and scale of PPT interventions vary enormously: from one private enterprise seeking to expand economic opportunities for poor neighbours, to a national programme enhancing participation by the poor
at all levels. Strategies can be broadly grouped into three types: expanding economic benefits for the poor; addressing non-economic impacts; and developing pro-poor policies/processes/partnerships.
Impacts on the poor
Emerging – though limited – indications of the impacts of the current PPT initiatives suggest that for the poor, where it happens, PPT interventions are invaluable. A few are lifted out of income-poverty while many more earn critical gap-filling income. More still are affected by non-financial livelihood benefits. These are very significant though highly varied; they include improved access to information and infrastructure, pride and cultural reinforcement. While some initiatives are yet to deliver on the ground, there are a few that affect hundreds directly and thousands indirectly.
http://www.propoortourism.org.uk/ppt_report.pdf
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