Research on tourism enclaves has relied mainly on topographical understandings of the phenomenon. The focus has been on the ontic, that which is or exists instead of the relational qualities or properties of tourism enclaves. Topographical conceptions thus tend to simplify enclavic processes and attributes that are much more complex than meets the eye. In this article, we make the case for topological understandings of tourism enclaves, based on a relational ontology, as a complement. We thereby strive to offer more nuanced conceptions of tourism enclaves. We depart from Agamben’s political ontology to illustrate our claim. Seen topologically, tourism enclaves are not simply spaces marked-off from the norm, but rather constituents of the no...
This article proposes a (critical) realist agenda for tourist studies, centred around the question, ...
Until the recent outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the growth of tourism had confronted many destin...
By the start of the century, nearly one billion international travelers were circulating the globe a...
Exclusively planned tourism destinations, such as all-inclusive resorts, gated resort communities, p...
From a paradigmatic understanding of tourism, the thing about tourism experiences is that they diffe...
Tourist maps cannot be understood as signs or symbolic representations of an already constituted des...
The multiplicity of tourism encounters provide some of the best available occasions to observe the s...
In this article we discuss how ANT has been translated into tourism research and show how it has imp...
International audienceIn geography, a region is one of the most obscure and controversial scientific...
This article critically reflects on the space of tourism and its intersection with spatial justice. ...
This symposium examines the relations between biopower, destination governance and tourism. Biopower...
Using a grounded theory approach, this study investigates stakeholders’ views of enclave tourism in ...
Tourism has become one of the largest and fastest growing industries of the global capitalist econom...
Tourism is inherently an earthly business, whether it is conceptualized in terms of the spatial move...
The article shows how the socio-economic relations that underlie the construction of discourse on to...
This article proposes a (critical) realist agenda for tourist studies, centred around the question, ...
Until the recent outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the growth of tourism had confronted many destin...
By the start of the century, nearly one billion international travelers were circulating the globe a...
Exclusively planned tourism destinations, such as all-inclusive resorts, gated resort communities, p...
From a paradigmatic understanding of tourism, the thing about tourism experiences is that they diffe...
Tourist maps cannot be understood as signs or symbolic representations of an already constituted des...
The multiplicity of tourism encounters provide some of the best available occasions to observe the s...
In this article we discuss how ANT has been translated into tourism research and show how it has imp...
International audienceIn geography, a region is one of the most obscure and controversial scientific...
This article critically reflects on the space of tourism and its intersection with spatial justice. ...
This symposium examines the relations between biopower, destination governance and tourism. Biopower...
Using a grounded theory approach, this study investigates stakeholders’ views of enclave tourism in ...
Tourism has become one of the largest and fastest growing industries of the global capitalist econom...
Tourism is inherently an earthly business, whether it is conceptualized in terms of the spatial move...
The article shows how the socio-economic relations that underlie the construction of discourse on to...
This article proposes a (critical) realist agenda for tourist studies, centred around the question, ...
Until the recent outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the growth of tourism had confronted many destin...
By the start of the century, nearly one billion international travelers were circulating the globe a...