Sweden

Sweden
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 4
Release: 1968
Genre: Sweden
ISBN:

Tourism Education

Tourism Education
Author: Pauline J. Sheldon
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2015-09-23
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1783509988

What knowledge and skills should tourism students be exposed to? How should tourism education programs at all levels be designed to create responsible leaders for the future of tourism? What is the employability and range of careers students can expect after graduation? This book examines and seeks to provide answers to these three questions.

Scandinavia

Scandinavia
Author: Franklin Daniel Scott
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1950
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674790001

North Sea oil, garden suburbs, socialized medicine, ombudsmen, economic diversification, party politics, relations with the US and the USSR--these are some of the exciting and controversial aspects of Scandinavian life in the 1970s that Franklin Scott explores in this revised edition of The United States and Scandinavia. An observer of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden, Scott shows how the old tradition-oriented communities have transformed themselves into modern change-oriented societies keenly aware of their position in the world.

The Critical Turn in Tourism Studies

The Critical Turn in Tourism Studies
Author: Irena Ateljevic
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 518
Release: 2007-03-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1136358595

New approaches to tourism study demonstrate a notable ‘critical turn’ – a shift in thought that emphasises interpretative and critical modes of tourism inquiry. The chapters in this volume reflect this emerging critical school of tourism studies and represent a coordinated effort of tourism scholars whose work engages innovative research methodologies. Since such work has been dispersed across a variety of tourism-related and other research fields, this book responds to a pressing need to consolidate recent advances in a single text. Adopting a broad definition of ‘criticality’, the contributors seek to find ‘fresh’ ways of theorising tourism by locating the phenomenon in its wider political, economic, cultural and social contexts. The collection addresses the power relations underpinning the production of academic knowledge; presents a range of qualitative data collection methods which confront the field’s dominant (post)positivist approaches; foregrounds the emotional dynamics of research relations and explores the personal, the political and the situated nature of research journeys. The book has been divided into two parts, with the essays in the first part establishing a context-specific framework for engaging philosophical and theoretical debates in contemporary tourism enquiry. The second set of essays then present, discuss and critique specific methodologies, research techniques, methods of interpretation and writing strategies, all of which are in some sense illustrative of ‘critical’ tourism research. Contributors range from postgraduate students to established academics and are drawn from both the geopolitical margins and the ‘powerbases’ of the tourism academy. Their various relationships with the English-speaking academy thus range from relative ‘outsider’ to well-positioned ‘insider’ and as a result, their essays are reflective of a range of locations within the complexly spun web of academic power relations and social divisions.

Background Notes

Background Notes
Author: United States. Department of State. Office of Media Services
Publisher:
Total Pages: 488
Release: 1975
Genre: Area studies
ISBN: