Tourism and National Parks

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Aboriginal Sacred Sites
area
Category=KNP
Category=S
comparative national park tourism models
concept
conservation policy analysis
Crater Lake
Crater Lake National Park
cultural landscape studies
earliest
environmental
environmental history research
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_sports-fitness
Fauna Preservation Society
GBRMP
Gwaii Haanas
hall
indigenous land stewardship
IUCN Category
Kalahari Gemsbok National Park
Kings Canyon National Park
michael
National Mall
National Park Systems
National Parks Concept
Natural Beauty
Picos De Europa
protected
protected area management
Protected Areas
Rocky Mountains National Park
royal
Scenic Park
Sequoia Gigantea
Socioeconomic Development
South Africa's National Parks
South Africa’s National Parks
swedish
Swedish Parliament
system
Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
Timbisha Shoshone
UK National Park
visitor impact assessment
World War Ii Memorial

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138867192
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In 1872 Yellowstone was established as a National Park. The name caught the public’s imagination and by the close of the century, other National Parks had been declared, not only in the USA, but also in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. Yet as it has spread, the concept has evolved and diversified. In the absence of any international controlling body, individual countries have been free to adapt the concept for their own physical, social and economic environments. Some have established national parks to protect scenery, others to protect ecosystems or wildlife. Tourism has also been a fundamental component of the national parks concept from the beginning and predates ecological justifications for national park establishment though it has been closely related to landscape conservation rationales at the outset.

Approaches to tourism and visitor management have varied. Some have stripped their parks of signs of human settlement, while increasingly others are blending natural and cultural heritage, and reflecting national identities. This edited volume explores in detail, the origins and multiple meanings of National Parks and their relationship to tourism in a variety of national contexts. It consists of a series of introductory overview chapters followed by case study chapters from around the world including insights from the US, Canada, Australia, UK, Spain, France, Sweden, Indonesia, China and Southern Africa.

Taking a global comparative approach, this book examines how and why national parks have spread and evolved, how they have been fashioned and used, and the integral role of tourism within national parks. The volume’s focus on the long standing connection between tourism and national parks; and the changing concept of national parks over time and space give the book a distinct niche in the national parks and tourism literature. The volume is expected to contribute not only to tourism and national park studies at the upper level undergraduate and graduate levels but also to courses in international and comparative environmental history, conservation studies, and outdoor recreation management.

Warwick Frost is Senior Lecturer in Tourism and Heritage at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. His research interests include environmental history, ecotourism, cultural heritage and the interplay between tourism and the media.

Michael Hall is a Professor in the Department of Management, University of Canterbury, New Zealand and Docent in the Department of Geography, Oulu University Finland. Co-editor of Current Issues in Tourism he has published widely in the tourism and environmental history fields, including a long-standing interest in wilderness, national parks and World Heritage.