Whale-watching is one of the fastest growing tourism industries worldwide, often viewed as a sustainable, non-consumptive strategy for the benefits of cetacean conservation and the coastal communities, alternative to and incompatible with whaling. Yet, there is paucity of research on how things actually work out at the community-level. Drawing on the research literature and my own ethnographic fieldwork, this article bridges a knowledge gap in this field while examining an Azorean context where tourism has brought a re-commodification of the whale for the community (observing wildlife as opposed to harpooning it) in the last 20 years. The analysis is focused on four main community-level implications: governance of common maritime resources,...
This paper explores the consequences of whale-watching tourism with reference to the Kingdom of Tong...
Alternative livelihood projects are criticised as having minimal effect on biodiversity conservation...
The perception of activities that may harm whales and their coexistence with whale tourism can be pr...
Whale-watching is one of the fastest growing tourism industries worldwide, often viewed as a sustain...
SFRH/BPD/34229/2006; UID/ANT/04038/2013Whale-watching is one of the fastest growing tourism industri...
Australia has long tried to portray itself as an environmentally responsible state and has consisten...
The question posed in the title to this chapter is deliberately provocative and it is a question whi...
Whale watching is a dynamic industry and, in particular in a country like Iceland, where tourism is ...
Winter whale-watching tourism has gained increasing popularity in Northern Norway during the last te...
Marine tourism is a new frontier of late-capitalist transformation, generating more global revenue t...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
There is scientific consensus that human activity through whale-watching is causing an increasing am...
Ecotourism in the Atlantic islands region is well-established and growing. Still, in the whale watch...
Since the 1980s, ecotourism has experienced a dramatic growth worldwide. Ecotourism comes with a def...
This paper explores the consequences of whale-watching tourism with reference to the Kingdom of Tong...
Alternative livelihood projects are criticised as having minimal effect on biodiversity conservation...
The perception of activities that may harm whales and their coexistence with whale tourism can be pr...
Whale-watching is one of the fastest growing tourism industries worldwide, often viewed as a sustain...
SFRH/BPD/34229/2006; UID/ANT/04038/2013Whale-watching is one of the fastest growing tourism industri...
Australia has long tried to portray itself as an environmentally responsible state and has consisten...
The question posed in the title to this chapter is deliberately provocative and it is a question whi...
Whale watching is a dynamic industry and, in particular in a country like Iceland, where tourism is ...
Winter whale-watching tourism has gained increasing popularity in Northern Norway during the last te...
Marine tourism is a new frontier of late-capitalist transformation, generating more global revenue t...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
This paper explores whaling and whale watching to determine the viability of their divergent practic...
There is scientific consensus that human activity through whale-watching is causing an increasing am...
Ecotourism in the Atlantic islands region is well-established and growing. Still, in the whale watch...
Since the 1980s, ecotourism has experienced a dramatic growth worldwide. Ecotourism comes with a def...
This paper explores the consequences of whale-watching tourism with reference to the Kingdom of Tong...
Alternative livelihood projects are criticised as having minimal effect on biodiversity conservation...
The perception of activities that may harm whales and their coexistence with whale tourism can be pr...