yac course - anthropology tourism

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Yac on line course on responbile tourism developement. Session 2: Anthropology of Tourism

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online course in responsible tourism development session #02

Alessandro Bazzanella

Anthropology of tourism

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Agenda

1. The framework: tourism as a major industry

2. A definition of the item

3. Why do humans need to travel? The push factors in tourism

4. Genius loci, identity and pull factors

5. The art of encounter: the host & guest relationship

6. Some marketing implications…

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Tourism: the world biggest industry? Some facts&figures

Over the decades, tourism has experienced continued growth and deepening diversification to become one of the fastest growing economic sectors in the world

Today, the business volume of tourism equals or even surpasses that of oil exports, food products or automobiles.

From 1950 to 2005, international tourism arrivals expanded at an annual rate of 6.5%, growing from 25 million to 806 million travellers.

The income generated by these arrivals grew at an even stronger rate reaching 11.2% during the same period, outgrowing the world economy, reaching around US$ 680 billion in 2005.

By 2020 international arrivals are expected to surpass 1.5 billion people

Source: UNWTO

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The good effects of tourism on places

Creates employment opportunities for local people

Many local facilities and infrastucture built to sustain tourism developement could lead to better education, health care, employment opportunities;

Promotes cultural awareness and can help preserve local culture andtraditions

Income generated from tourism can be used to develop local infrastructure and services e.g. new roads and airports.

Conservation of the local cultural heritage and the rebirth of its crafts, traditions, etc….

Natural features that attract tourists can be protected using income from tourism

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and the bad effects….

The increase in air travel has contributed towards increased carbon dioxide emissions. On a local level natural featuresthat attract tourists are themselves under threat due to human actions.

Often local people are employed in low skill, poorly paid work in unsatisfactory working conditions

Travel agents, airline companies and hoteliers benefit more than local companies when holidays are booked to destinations

Help destroy local culture and traditions

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The good, the bad and…the responsible

Tha main aim is generating greater economic benefits for local people and enhancing the well being of host communities

improves working conditions and access to the industryinvolves local people in decisions that affect their lives and life chances

makes positive contributions to the conservation of natural and cultural heritage embracing diversity

provides more enjoyable experiences for tourists through more meaningful connections with local people, and a greater understanding of local cultural, social and environmental issues

provides access for physically challenged people is culturally sensitive, encourages respect between tourists and

hosts, and builds local pride and confidence

Responsible tourism…

(Cape Town Declaration, 2002)

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What is anthropology of tourism?

Anthropology of tourism is the discipline that studies human beings while they are travelling…

Anthropology is the scientific study of the origin and behavior of mankind, including the

development of societies and cultures.

people who "travel to and stay in places

outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year

for leisure, business and other purposes "

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Why is important?

We saw that tourism is a big and pervasive industry. To better plan tourism and to make it more sustainable and responsible, is important to understand the role of the “human factor” in tourism

The human factor is very important. In any travelling experience the tourists establish many relations with many people.

Let’s try to analize the travelling experience of a tourist from the search of information about a place to the coming back to home. It’s quite complex…

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The travelling experience begins before the trip and finishes after…SEARCHING FOR

INFOS

BOOKING

TRAVEL TO THEDESTINATION

ACCOMODATION

RESTAURANTS

TRANSPORTATION

SHOPPING

LOCAL GUIDES

During a travel experience the guest interacts with many operators of tourism (travel agency, hotels, restaurants, guides, mobility, shopping, …)

The satisfaction of guests depends on all the interactions he has during his trip

Is a very complex problem…with a lot of actors involved

This is the reason why the HUMAN FACTORIs so important in tourism

TRAVEL BACK

stefano.andreotti

+ 10Why do we travel? A brief history of tourism…(of Europe)

In Europe, the first tourists (in 19° century) were seeking warmer places and thermal baths to cure illness

During the ’60 “economic boom”, people discovered the pleasure of staying in holyday after a year of hard work

In the ‘80 tourism becomes a mass phenomenon

In the ‘90 tourism becomes a global phenomenon

At our times tourism is a very complex industry and the mass market is replaced by the niche markets

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The push factors in tourism What makes people travel?

Working overload

Pollution and urban life conditions

Restlessness

Nostalgia for the lost paradise

Boredom/Routine

Relaxation

Prestige

Exploration and evaluation of self

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The pull factors in tourism

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Images, signs and stereotypes

Places are chosen to be gazed upon because there is anticipation of intense pleasures, constructed and sustained through a variety of non-tourist practices, such as film, Tv, literature, magazines, etc…

The tourist gaze is directed to features of landscape and townscape which separate them off from everyday experience.

The gaze is constructed through signs, and tourism involves the collection of signs. When tourists see two people kissing in Paris what they capture in the gaze is 'timeless romantic Paris'. When a small village in England is seen, what they gaze upon is the 'real old England'.

The tourists are fanning out in search of the signs of Frenchness, typical Italian behaviour, exemplary oriental scenes, typical American thruways, traditional English pubs'

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The power of images…

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Tourism paradoxes

Travellers destroy what they seek…

Tourists dont’t love tourists…

Tourism destinations promise eden uncorrupted by… tourists themselves

Tourists escape from their everyday life to find… the perfect copy of their reality (in the environmental bubbles…)

Tourists seek destinations with good connections and accessibility, but they don’t like crowd at all…

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Genius loci

For a destination is very important to recognize and empower its traditions, its identity, its unique way of life

In other words: it’s important to discover and to enhance its genius loci

Genius loci is a latin term meaning ‘the genius of the place”, in modern terms is the distinctive atmosphere or pervading spirit of a place.

The genius loci is not static in time, but it changes…

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How to meet the genius lociThe ingredients of the identity

GENIUS LOCI

Geography

ArchitectureEnvironment

Traditions

HistoryReligion

Food & cuisine

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Exercise: try to define the genius loci of the place you live in

Let’s find no more than 5 terms that could define the genius loci of the place you live in…

I do it, too:

The genius loci of my region, Trentino, is

Austere, reliable, friendly, sincere, inspiring

Please post your terms on the wiki page dedicated to the course: http://responsibletourismyac.wiki-site.com/index.php/Anthropology_of_Tourism

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Hosts and guestsThe anthropology of the encounter

Host and guest have multiple and largely similar derivations, including the Latin hostis and the  German gast: stranger, foreigner, enemy.

Also the word travel comes from “travaille”, a french-latin word that means “suffering…”

So the root of the two words is the same and has a negative connotation and the relationship between host and guest connotes a sense of ambivalent hostility and friendship

Oxford English Dictionary define hospitality as “the act or practice of being hospitable; the reception and entertainment of guests, visitors or strangers, with liberality and goodwill

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Host sentiments towards tourists

Euphoria Visitors and investors welcomeVisitors taken for granted

Apathy More formal relationships between hosts and guests

Annoyance Residents misgiving about tourism

Antagonism Irritations openly expressedResidents perceive tourists as cause of problems

Resignation Resignation to the problems, avoiding contacts with tourists

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Resident-visitor exchange

RESIDENTS VISITORS

+ 22Some determinants of the social relations that are established between 'hosts' and 'guests'. The number of tourists visiting a place in relationship to the size of the host

population

The predominant object of the tourist gaze, whether it is a landscape, a townscape, an ethnic group, a lifestyle, historical artefacts, bases of recreation (golf, ski), or simply sand, sun and sea

The organization of the industry that develops to service the mass gaze: whether-it is private or publicly owned and financed; whether it is locally owned or involves significant overseas interests; whether the capital involved is predominantly small- or large-scale;

The effects of tourism upon the pre-existing agricultural and industrial activities.

The economic and social differences between the visitors and the majority of the hosts.

The degree to which the mass of visitors demand particular standards of accommodation and service,' that they should be enclosed in an environmental bubble to provide protection from many of the features of the host society.

The degree to which the state in a given country actively seeks to promote tourist developments or alternatively endeavours to prevent them.

J. Urry, The tourist gaze

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Some marketing implications A better understanding of the differences between host and and guests

allow to better manage the host-guest relationship. And every destination could find its own way to mangage this interaction, starting from its own factors of uniqueness.

The more you enhance the genus loci, the more you will provide to the tourists a unique esperience. The only thing that no one could replicate is your place’s identity. Every place on earth has its own “genetic code”…

Before creating a offer in your destination, ask yourself: why does someone choose me? Analize what are the motivations and evaluate if you can satisfy the expectations of the potential clients.

Images are very powerful tools to strike the imagination of customers, choose them carefully to promote your destination

Tourists seek for experiences and emotions, not only “services”. Be aware of this…

Never stop measuring guests satisfaction…

In the “social web age”, satisfied guests are the best testimonials of your destination…

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Thank you very much!Alessandro Bazzanellamail: alessandro.bazzanella@gmail.comskype: alessandro.bazzanella

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