Tourism, Cosmopolitanism and Global Citizenship

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Aaron Tham
Adam Landon
Alexandra Meeker
altruism
Amy Kipp
Aspirational Subjectivities
BV
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Celebrate Life
Citizen Science
Citizen Science Projects
Citizenship Education
Cori Jakubiak
Cosmopolitan Empathy
Cosmopolitan Global Citizenship
Critical Global Citizenship
Democratic Citizenship Education
Deviant Online Behaviour
Dianne Dredge
Digital Cosmopolitanism
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eq_business-finance-law
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Ethical Tourism
Felix Schubert
Giang Thi Phi
Global Citizenry
Global Citizenship
higher education internationalisation
Host Gaze
intercultural empathy
International Service Learning
Iulia Iordache-Bryant
Joanne Hanley
Jocelyn Faulkner
João Afonso Baptista
Kevin Daniel Lyons
Kevin Hannam
Kevin Lyons
Michael Tarrant
Michelle Whitford
Mingzhong Wang
moral education tourism
NGO Sphere
Noella J. Gray
Outbound Student Mobility
Rebecca L. Nelson
Ruth Cheung Judge
Sacha Reid
Sarah Ravensbergen
Simone Grabowski
social identity development
Stephen Wearing
Study Internship Programmes
Studying Volunteer Tourism
Tamara Young
Tourism Cosmopolitanism
transformative travel experiences
travel
Volunteer Tourism
Volunteer Tourism Programme
volunteer travel research
Young Man
youth mobility studies
Émilie Crossley

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138483088
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 210 x 280mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Certain types of tourism, such as volunteer tourism and student travel, have long been associated with global citizenship. To travel and to experience other societies and other cultures is linked with a cosmopolitan outlook, and also with the capacity to empathise and act ethically in relation to people in distant countries. In turn global citizenship – being a ‘citizen of the world’ - has become increasingly important both as a moral and political identity. Encouraged by employers, validated by universities, travel has become a marker of moral and intent for altruistic and ambitious youth with a mind to travel and the bank balance to facilitate it. The chapters in this volume explore the relationship between tourism, global citizenship and cosmopolitanism.

The chapters were originally published in a special issue of Tourism Recreation Research.

Jim Butcher is a Reader in the School of Human and Life Sciences at Canterbury Christ Church University in the UK. He has written three books on the politics of tourism, and blogs at http://politicsoftourism.blogspot.co.uk/