602 resultados para Taiwanese tourists
Resumo:
Wilkinson, Jane, 'Writing Home: Martin Walser's Ein fliehendes Pferd as Anti-Tourist Literature', Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change (2006) 4(3) pp.001-017 RAE2008
Resumo:
The atmospheric concentrations of the acid gases SO2, HCl, and HF were measured during austral summer 2001 in the summit crater area of Villarrica volcano using 'filter packs'. These data were collected in order to assess the acid gas hazards to tourists who ascend the volcano. The authors compared their acid gas concentration results with exposure limits outlined by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH-United States of America). The authors conclude that tourists who visit the summit crater of Villarrica may be exposed to non-lethal concentrations of SO2 and HCl that exceed the recommended exposure limits defined by NIOSH, while atmospheric concentrations of HF do not exceed the recommended exposure limits.
Resumo:
This article, and the research out of which it springs, has a number of points of origin; it may also have more than one point of conclusion even as it argues that the current manifestation of Las Vegas could well be read as its last. This is not to say that Las Vegas will cease to create its new versions of itself; after all, this is one of the main sustaining factors of Las Vegas’ success in the last two decades as a new Strip on Las Vegas Boulevard has arisen from the demolitions and redesigns of the original Las Vegas Strip of the 1950s and 1960s. What is argued for here is a reading of Vegas as a terminal point within American culture and particularly within its visual realms. Las Vegas’ place within the dynamics of American visual and exhibition culture comes as the latest in a sequence which, since the nineteenth century, has included among its manifestations World’s Fairs, side shows, freak shows and travelling carnivals. America’s experiments in the visual domain have been updated in both the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries in a variety of spectacular forms and entertainment zones (Disneyland, EPCOT, the new Las Vegas). Vegas is the ultimate incarnation of a carnivalised display culture, the city’s casino Strip reclothed primarily as a theme park for digital camera-toting tourists than as a resort for dedicated gamblers. The possibility that the current incarnation of Las Vegas of late 2009 and 2010 will be the last Vegas hovers as a spectral remnant of the economic downturn and financial collapse of 2008, marked by the unfinished skeletons of projected new casino hotels on Las Vegas Boulevard and by a sudden reversal of fortune for the nation’s favourite gaming location.
Resumo:
This paper considers the recent proliferation of Belfast‘s =Quarters‘ as part of global trends towards the theming of city space, and as a response to the particular situation of Belfast at the beginning of the twenty-first century. It focuses on the Gaeltacht Quarter, a site that exemplifies the difficulty of applying the internationally popular model of cultural difference as a resource for the production of tourist revenue to the context of contested cities. The =quartering‘ of Belfast is represented as a response to post-industrial and post-conflict predicaments this city shares with many others. I consider how the urban context is sometimes exploited, as in exhortations to investors and tourists to contribute to Belfast‘s transformation from =a city of two halves‘ to =a city of seven quarters‘, and sometimes obscured, as in the recent re-invention of the Quarters as remnants of the city‘s distant past.
Resumo:
This article argues that the terrorist bombings of hotels, pubs and nightclubs in Bali in October 2002, and in Mombasa one month later, were inaugural moments in the post-9/11 securitization of the tourism industry. Although practices of tourism and terrorism seem antithetical – one devoted to travel and leisure, the other to political violence – this article argues that their entanglement is revealed most clearly in the counter-terrorism responses that brought the everyday lives of tourists and tourism workers, as well as the material infrastructure of the tourism industry, within the orbit of a global security apparatus waging a ‘war on terror’. Drawing on critical work in international relations and geography, this article understands the securitization of tourism as part of a much wider logic in which the liberal order enacts pernicious modes of governance by producing a terrorist threat that is exceptional. It explores how this logic is reproduced through a cosmopolitan community symbolized by global travellers, and examines the measures taken by the tourism industry to secure this community (e.g. the physical transformations of hotel infrastructure and the provision of counter-terrorism training).
Resumo:
In the 1980s, urban re-imaging and place marketing were vital elements in the strategies of post-industrial cities aiming to redefine their role, make themselves more competitive and attract global investment and tourists. By the early 1990s, the questionable effects of trickle-down economics on deprived housing estates and the rediscovery of the 'community' as a social partner shifted both the substance and process of vision exercises. This paper examines the experience of building an input into a city vision that aimed to address social and ethno-religious segregation in Derry/Londonderry. Designing a consensus statement for a city that cannot agree its name, was wrecked by bloody violence and has its hinterland fractured by a contested international border, is a difficult and delicate process. The city had a population of 105 800 people in 1998, but is divided by the river Foyle between the mainly Catholic Cityside (to the north and west) and the mainly Protestant Waterside (to the south and east). The analysis connects with the literature on urban policy that emphasises the importance of argumentation and democratic debate in strategic planning and local regeneration (Forester, 1989; Healey, 1996). The paper concludes by arguing that strategies for 'listening' would help to shape a vision that could mobilise community interests around some common urban regional issues and help to promote social and ethno-religious polarisation as mainstream policy concerns.
Resumo:
The Belfast Soundwalks project, led by Professor Pedro Rebelo and co-ordinated by Dr Sarah Bass (Sonic Arts Research Centre) in collaboration with Belfast City Council (BCC), aims to use sonic art to engage the public through the development of a locative mobile phone app. Targeting both tourists and citizens of the city, this project aims to sonically enhance the experience of a number of areas of the city, including destinations that may not traditionally be accessed as attractions by visitors and/or disregarded or undervalued by local residents. The project will bring together a number of sonic artists/composers who will create approximately ten soundwalks around the city, while liaising with BCC to distribute the resulting app to the public in line with their tourism and cultural strategy. The project is centred on the development of smart phone apps which provide unique listening experiences associated with key places in the city. The user’s location in the city is tracked through GPS which triggers sound materials ranging from speech to environmental sound and abstract imagined sound worlds. Additionally, local community groups will be consulted in order to evaluate and reflect upon the effectiveness of the soundwalks.
The project builds on the success of the Literary Belfast app and aims to further strengthen links between Queen’s University Belfast and Belfast City Council through facilitating the dissemination of an art form not widely experienced by the general public. Through the newly created Institute for Collaborative Research in the Humanities, directed by Professor John Thompson we are articulating this project with Queen’s consortium partners, Newcastle University and Durham University.
“The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) funds world-class, independent researchers in a wide range of subjects: ancient history, modern dance, archaeology, digital content, philosophy, English literature, design, the creative and performing arts, and much more. This financial year the AHRC will spend approximately £98m to fund research and postgraduate training in collaboration with a number of partners. The quality and range of research supported by this investment of public funds not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. For further information on the AHRC, please go to: www.ahrc.ac.uk”.
Resumo:
At Easter 1916, Dublin city centre was one of a series of sites throughout Ireland where a rebellion was staged against British rule. It was a strategic failure, swiftly crushed by superior British forces. The event, however, subsequently took a central role in the mythology of modern Ireland.
The first visual representations were of the conflict’s aftermath: photographic journeys through landscapes of ruin. From the distance of the camera, we see none of the pockmarks of shell bursts, nor the etchings of machine guns. Instead, traces of life in the city seem to have been swept aside by an unseen hand: the passing of millennia or a violent action of nature. Architecture alone has witnessed and recorded its presence. Amongst the fragments, the shell of the General Post Office (G.P.O.) in Sackville Street is one of the few buildings still wholly recognizable. The remnants of its classical form, portico and pediment, columns and entablature seem to transcend its prosaic modern functions and allude to something more ancient. The bewilderment of city’s inhabitants is also recorded. Dubliners have become inquisitive tourists in streets which hitherto were the locus of everyday life. They wander around aimlessly in a landscape as alien and picturesque as Pompeii. This shift in perception was captured by the Irish poet W.B. Yeats who hinted that Dublin, purged of modern commercialism had transcended its petty inadequacies to revive a slumbering heroic past.
‘I have met them at the close of day
Coming with vivid faces
From counter or desk among grey
Eighteenth-century houses [.]’
All is changed, changed utterly:
A terrible beauty is born.’
His comments were prescient. Initially unpopular, the republican leaders, executed by the British, slowly became recast as heroic martyrs. Similarly, the spaces where their heroism was forged became venerated. The G.P.O. and Sackville Street, however, already had a republican history. It was originally conceived in the eighteenth century as part of a series of magnificent urban spaces to provide an arena of spectacle and self-celebration for the colonial Anglo-Irish and their vision of a Protestant republic. O’Connell/Sackville Street became the temporal, geographical and mythical hinge upon which two different versions of Irish republicanism waxed and waned. Its recasting after independence as a space of Catholic Nationalism bore testimony to its consistency in providing a backdrop for the production of ritual and myth. In the 1920s and 30s, as the nascent country, beset with economic stagnation and political tensions, turned to spectacle as a salve for it social problems, O’Connell Street and the G.P.O. provided its most sacred sites. Within the introduction of new myths, however, individual as well as national identities were created and consolidated. The emerging identity of modern Ireland became inextricably linked with that of one ambitious politician. His uses of the G.P.O. in particular revealed a perceptive understanding of the political uses of classical architecture and urban space.
Resumo:
A timely, and uniquely historical, look at how war turns soldiers, and all of us, into tourists. Holidays in the Danger Zone exposes the mundane and everyday entanglements between two seemingly opposed worlds—warfare and tourism. Debbie Lisle shows how a tourist sensibility shapes the behavior of soldiers in warespecially the experiences of Western military forces in “exotic” settings. This includes not only R&R but also how battlefields themselves become landscapes of leisure and tourism. It further explores how a military sensibility shapes the development of tourism in the postwar context, from “Dark Tourism” (engaging with displays of conflict and atrocity) to exhibitions of conflict in museums and at memorial sites, as well as in advertising, film, journals, guidebooks, blogs, and photography. Focused on how war and tourism reinforce prevailing modes of domination, Holidays in the Danger Zone critically examines the long historical arc of the war-tourism nexus from nineteenth-century imperialism to World War I and World War II, from the Cold War to globalization and the War on Terror.
Resumo:
Num mundo cada vez mais industrializado e consumista, com assimetrias territoriais várias, a defesa dos valores ambientais assume uma progressiva importância, uma vez que a qualidade de vida passa também pela qualidade ambiental. Como os produtos gerados pelo consumo devem ter o confinamento correto em função das suas diversas componentes, a gestão do processo de deposição, recolha e transporte de RSU, fica mais complexa, à medida que a população e a área se diversifica e expande, como acontece em alguns territórios rurais, agravando os custos e os impactos ambientais induzidos, se não for equacionada uma solução simultaneamente eficaz e eficiente. Paralelamente urge a satisfação dos residentes e dos restantes utilizadores enquanto usuários desses territórios. Por este motivo, nos últimos anos, as autarquias têm vindo a estudar essas soluções nas suas áreas de jurisdição, tentando com as ações realizadas, respeitar não só os critérios de proteção ambiental, mas também as necessidades das pessoas. Neste trabalho apresentam-se algumas variáveis identificadas, como resultados de um estudo de caso aplicado a um município rural, Anadia, onde se evidencia a ausência de sensibilização e a carência de meios e processos que podem comprometer as metas ambientais e sociais desejadas. In a world, progressively more industrialized and consumer, with several territorial disparities, the protection of environmental values assumes an increasingly importance, since the quality of life also involves environmental quality. As the products generated by the consumption must have a correct confinement in its various components, the management of the deposition process, collection and transportation of municipal solid waste, is more complex, as the population and the area expand, as happens in some rural territories, increasing the cost and environmental impacts induced, if not equated a solution both effective and efficient. At the same time it is very important to increase the satisfaction of residents, visitors and tourists visiting these areas. For this reason, in the last years, the municipalities have been studying these solutions in their areas of jurisdiction. That is why they try to respect not only the criteria of environmental protection, but also the needs of people and fulfilled actions whose variables we shall try to present as a case study applied to a rural municipality, Anadia, where we show up that the absence of awareness and the lack of means and processes can compromise the desired environmental and social goals
Resumo:
Vivemos num mundo cada vez mais globalizado e uma das consequências é a crescente concorrência que existe entre territórios, reforçando-se a necessidade de fazer chegar aos públicos interessados, um conjunto de atributos e diferenciações, suficientemente atrativos e apelativos, para que estes territórios sejam “consumidos”, não só pelo seu reconhecimento temporal, mas também pela forma como ele se comunica. Se até ao momento esta diferenciação era apenas explicitada numa base meramente turística (pelos impactos económicos positivos que normalmente se conseguem), hoje a estratégia deve seguir um plano de marketing capaz de atrair e fixar quer residentes, excursionistas, turistas e investidores, satisfazendo-os. Dos estudos realizados é comumente aceite que o sucesso da execução de um plano de marketing territorial assenta num modelo participativo que promova e antecipe necessidades e desejos dos atores globais e que valide e identifique os pontos fortes, para ajudar a desenvolver (definir e implementar) uma estratégia sustentável, a prazo. Então é relevante chamar ao processo estes atores (públicos e privados, residentes e visitantes) envolvendo-os nesta identificação, comprometendo-os também nos seus resultados.Com este artigo apresenta-se então um estudo de caso aplicado a um território rural, na freguesia de Avelãs de Cima, tendo sido utilizada como metodologia um inquérito por questionário a todos os atores. Enumeram-se os fatores relevantes identificados, assim como os que não se desejam ver aplicados, requisitos evidentes para iniciar uma nova política de comunicação pública. Deste trabalho já resultou uma nova abordagem pelos atores públicos locais, destacando a perspetiva de utilização de sinergias pela integração dos recursos de duas outras freguesias, estando em construção um projeto comum de rotas com base nos atributos dessas localidades.-----We live in an increasingly globalized world and one of the consequences is the increasing competition that exists between areas, reinforcing the need to reach out to stakeholders, a set of attributes and differences sufficiently attractive and appealing, so that these territories are "consumed ", not only by their temporal recognition, but also for how it communicates. If so far this differentiation was only explained in a purely tourist base (by the positive economic impacts that usually can get), today the strategy must follow a marketing plan able to attract and retain residents, hikers, tourists and investors. There are studies where is commonly accepted that the successful implementation of a territorial marketing plan based on a participatory model that promotes and anticipate needs and desires of the global players and validate and identify the strengths, to help develop (define and implement) one sustainable strategy in the long term. So it is relevant to call these actors (public and private, residents and visitors) involving them in this identification and also committing them in their results. With this article we present a case study applied to a rural area in the parish of Avelãs de Cima, having been used a survey methodology for all actors. All the relevant identified factors are listed, as well as those which do not wish to see applied, clear requirements to start a new policy of public communication. This work has resulted in a new approach by local public actors, highlighting the prospect of using synergies by integrating the features of two other parishes, under construction with a common design routes based on attributes of those localities.
Resumo:
A presente investigação, conducente à obtenção do grau de Doutor em Turismo na Universidade de Évora, aborda a temática dos eventos culturais no âmbito da actividade turística na Ilha da Madeira. Nesse sentido, e definido o objecto, o objectivo geral da pesquisa consistiu em analisar o contributo dos principais eventos turísticos - Festa da Flor, Festa do Vinho e Festa do Fim-de-Ano - na valorização das tradições culturais da Ilha e na promoção do destino Madeira. Para atingir os objectivos definidos, foi utilizada uma metodologia dual que consistiu num abordagem quantitativa e qualitativa, através da administração de um inquérito por questionário, um inquérito por entrevista e da utilização da observação directa e/ou participante, em triangulação que considerou o lado da procura e o lado da oferta. Foi possível concluir que os eventos analisados dão um contributo importante para a valorização das tradições, para a pertença e coesão social, e que enfatizam a interacção social entre turistas e anfitriões, ao mesmo tempo que consistem numa oferta singular e única; ABSTRACT: This dissertation was conceived to obtain the doctor degree in Tourism at the University of Évora. It approaches the theme of cultural events in the frame work of tourism activity in the island of Madeira. The main objective of the study was to analyze the contribution of the major tourist events (Flower Festival, Wine Festival and the Feast of the End-of-Year) on the value of cultural traditions of the island and the promotion of Madeira. The defined objectives were accomplished by the use of a dual methodology, through an approach of quantitative and qualitative orientation – by means of questionnaire to the tourists, interviews to the organisers and direct and participant observation by the researcher. We can conclude about the cultural importance of the three selected feasts (Flower Festival, Wine Festival and the Feast of the End-of-Year) as a major contribute to value the tradition, to emphasize the social cohesion, to identify the tourist experience and to evaluate social interaction between hosts and guests as an unique and singular offer.
Resumo:
O turismo é uma importante ferramenta para desenvolver a economia da Ilha da Madeira. Neste ãmbito é necessário influenciar os turistas potenciais. Os municípios e as instâncias regionais devem ter um papel determinante na promoção da sua localidade como um destino turístico. Os meios de comunicação são essenciais para a promoção de um destino turístico. Entre os diferentes instrumentos de promoção, a Internet é um novo meio para disseminar as vantagens de certos lugares e regiões. Neste estudo, procura-se verificar e analisar o papel dos municípios da Madeira e da DRT na promoção da sua localidade como um destino turístico, via Internet. /*** Abstract - Tourism is an important tool to develop the economy of Madeira island. On that respect it is necessary to influence potential tourists. Municipalities and regional bodies must have an important role to promote the various tourism destinations. Media tools are essential for the promotion of the communities as tourism destinations. Among the different instruments of promotion Internet is a new way to promote, compete and disseminate the advantages of certain places and regions. In this study the approach is oriented to identify and analyse the role of Madeira municipalities in the promotion of their tourism locals, via Internet.
Resumo:
A partir de uma amostra de 600 turistas internacionais que circulam em Portugal, Espanha e Itália, este estudo identifica as principais os conceitos chave relacionados com o terrorismo, a percepção de risco, envolvimento e motivação para a segurança dos turistas internacionais. Diferentes níveis de preocupação relativamente à segurança pode influenciar as decisões dos turistas. No seu processo de decisão, os turistas avaliam vários factores, nomeadamente, o nível de risco ou de segurança que consideram nos destinos (Sonmez, 1998). Os turistas adoptam uma atitude protectora alterando os seus comportamentos durante os processos de decisão, substituindo os destinos que consideram inseguros por outros associados a uma maior segurança (Gu & Martin, 1992; Mansfeld, 1996). O terrorismo exacerbado pelos media tem efeitos graves nas receitas dos destinos turísticos (Taylor, 2006). Através da publicidade negativa, um destino turístico que experiencia um incidente terrorista pode ver a sua reputação danificada e a actividade turística severamente comprometida (Sonmez, 1998). Inclusivamente, a imageme negativa de um destino pode ser generalizada e pode também afectar outros países ou regiões por períodos de tempo indeterminados (Taylor, 2006). Um modelo de equações estruturais revela que os turistas são motivados para adquirir informação sobre o terrorismo nos media, nomeadamente mostram atenção e interesse sobre essas notícias e esse facto influencia directamente o seu risco percebido. A percepção de risco influencia directamente o envolvimento dos turistas no planeamento da viagem, especificamente a procura de informação antes da viagem e quando estão no destino. A percepção de risco e o envolvimento dos turistas influencia a percepção da importância da segurança.A discussão foca as implicações deste modelo para a teoria e para as instituições e organizações turísticas. São igualmente apresentadas recomendações para os gestores e promotores dos destinos e para os gestores das organizações turísticas. Direcções futuras de investigação são igualmente apresentadas.
Resumo:
A presente investigação concretiza a abordagem holística ao fenómeno do turismo interno, abordando aspectos conceptuais sobre o seu âmbito e dificuldades de medição. Por outro lado, equaciona o papel que esta forma de turismo pode representar, não só em termos de adequação às dinâmicas e às perspectivas que enquadram as actividades turísticas em geral, como também em relação aos efeitos que pode gerar nos domínios económico, social, cultural, ambiental e territorial. A pesquisa engloba igualmente a análise empírica de dados que permitiu caracterizar as particularidades do turismo interno no plano internacional e no caso específico de Portugal, bem como o reconhecimento do seu carácter estratégico. Perante esta última realidade materializou-se a criação de um modelo empírico de desenvolvimento do turismo interno, o qual referencia, numa primeira fase, a estrutura e as componentes sistémicas, para concluir com a referência ao quadro conceptual de organização do planeamento estratégico e a sua consequente aplicação à realidade portuguesa.