Tourism, Land Grabs and Displacement: The Darker Side of the Feel-Good Industry
ISBN: 9780429340727
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited

Subjects: Global Development; Economics Finance Business & Industry; Environment and Sustainability; Politics & International Relations; Tourism Hospitality and Events; Global Development; Development Policy; Rural Development; Politics & Development; Population & Development; Sustainable Development; Environmental Policy; Environmental Politics; Environmental Law - Environmental Studies; Environment & Business; Environment & Economics; Environmental Politics; Regional Development; Economics; Environmental Management; Tourism; Africa - Regional Development; Latin America; Middle East - Regional Development; South Asia - Regional Development; South East Asia; Development Economics; Environmental Economics; Resource Management - Environmental Studies; Tourism and the Environment; Tourism Development/ Impacts; Tourism Law;


This book examines the global scope of tourism-related grabbing of land and other natural resources.

Tourism is often presented as a peaceful and benevolent sector that brings people from different cultural backgrounds together and contributes to employment, poverty alleviation, and global sustainable development. This book sheds light on the lesser known and much darker side of tourism as it unfolds in the Global South. While there is no doubt that tourism has been an engine of economic growth for many so-called developing countries, this has often come at the cost of widespread dispossession and displacement of Indigenous and non-indigenous communities. In many countries of the Global South, tourism development is increasingly prioritised by governments, businesses, international financial institutions and donors over the legitimate land and resource rights of local people. This book examines the actors, drivers, mechanisms, discourses and impacts of tourism-related land grabbing and displacement, drawing on more than thirty case studies from Latin America and the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa, South and Southeast Asia, the Middle East and the Southwest Pacific. The book provides solid grounds for an informed debate on how different actors are responsible for the adverse impacts of tourism on land rights infringements, what forms of resistance have been deployed against tourism-related land grabs and displacement, and how those who have violated local land and resource rights can be held accountable.

Tourism, Land Grabs and Displacement will be essential reading for students and scholars of land and resource grabbing, tourism studies, development studies and sustainable development more broadly, as well as policymakers and practitioners working in those fields.


Andreas Neef is Professor in Development Studies at the University of Auckland, New Zealand and co-editor of The Tourism-Disaster-Conflict Nexus (2018). With Chanrith Ngin, he edits the Routledge Studies in Global Land and Resource Grabbing book series.

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