Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to focus on the Sourtoe Cocktail, a custom in Dawson City, Canada’s Yukon, in which participants drink a shot of alcohol with a dehydrated human toe in it. Springing from a local legend, the thrill-inducing Sourtoe Cocktail has attracted the attention of tourists. The paper reveals insights from this particular case study in order to discuss potential future tourism trends within the Arctic, especially in regard to the development of a sustainable tourism industry. Additionally, it illustrates how local communities can avoid negative effects of “Arctification.” Design/methodology/approach: The case study is deconstructed through Dean MacCannell’s (1976) framework of sight sacralization. The S...
An experiment in both form and content, the essay lightly adopts an Australian storytelling style to...
Abstract The Arctic is facing rapid and significant social, cultural, economic and environmental ch...
Through a critical reading of previous research, this article explores local and indigenous cultures...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to focus on the Sourtoe Co...
The Inuvialuit Region of the Canadian western Arctic continues to support a variety of land-based ac...
Tourism has grown in many Arctic peripheries of northern Europe and North America in recent years, p...
Scholars often frame cultural tourism in terms of a host/guest relationship between communities and ...
Tourism has grown in many Arctic peripheries of northern Europe and North America, particularly amon...
This chapter (Chapter 5) offers an examination of Arctic tourism. Viewed through the lens of the “de...
This is an Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Ren, C., Jóhannesson, G.T., Kramvig...
This project explores the notion that the summer camping community in Dawson City, Yukon, epitomizes...
The framing of the Canadian Arctic by federal civil servants often bound to currents in discourse th...
Arctic tourism has seen major shifts in the last decade as global events and local developments have...
This paper addresses human capital in the Arctic in relation to tourism. More specifically, with an ...
The Arctic is facing rapid and significant social, cultural, economic and environmental changes. In ...
An experiment in both form and content, the essay lightly adopts an Australian storytelling style to...
Abstract The Arctic is facing rapid and significant social, cultural, economic and environmental ch...
Through a critical reading of previous research, this article explores local and indigenous cultures...
Publisher's version (útgefin grein)Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to focus on the Sourtoe Co...
The Inuvialuit Region of the Canadian western Arctic continues to support a variety of land-based ac...
Tourism has grown in many Arctic peripheries of northern Europe and North America in recent years, p...
Scholars often frame cultural tourism in terms of a host/guest relationship between communities and ...
Tourism has grown in many Arctic peripheries of northern Europe and North America, particularly amon...
This chapter (Chapter 5) offers an examination of Arctic tourism. Viewed through the lens of the “de...
This is an Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Ren, C., Jóhannesson, G.T., Kramvig...
This project explores the notion that the summer camping community in Dawson City, Yukon, epitomizes...
The framing of the Canadian Arctic by federal civil servants often bound to currents in discourse th...
Arctic tourism has seen major shifts in the last decade as global events and local developments have...
This paper addresses human capital in the Arctic in relation to tourism. More specifically, with an ...
The Arctic is facing rapid and significant social, cultural, economic and environmental changes. In ...
An experiment in both form and content, the essay lightly adopts an Australian storytelling style to...
Abstract The Arctic is facing rapid and significant social, cultural, economic and environmental ch...
Through a critical reading of previous research, this article explores local and indigenous cultures...