Continued growth in global tourism is increasingly accompanied by claims that tourism has become a vital component of contemporary citizenship. This paper conceptualizes tourism's relationship to existing and emergent ideas of citizenship, with particular emphasis on the interplay between the freedom of movement and right to travel. In light of calls for the consideration of tourism as a vital social need and a human right, the work interrogates the degree to which the right to travel can be considered an integral citizenship right. Despite this position, international travel and tourist activities also embody diverse and often contested notions and practices of citizenship. Moreover, given that notions of citizenship signify duties and res...
The year 1993 marked the establishment of formal EU citizenship and, subsequently, special relations...
This article explores global citizenship through the narratives of employees of a Danish travel-rela...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...
This paper reflects on the association of volunteer tourism with global citizenship and argues that ...
The freedom of movement and right to travel are intrinsic to the growth of international tourism. No...
The freedom of movement and right to travel are intrinsic to the growth of international tourism. No...
In the current trend of increasing globalization, relationships are evolving between global and loca...
Accounting for over one-twelfth of world trade and by far the largest movement of people across bord...
Persistent limitations to the industry-centric and resident-centric approaches to tourism highlight ...
There is an increasing emphasis in tourism research on the role that tourism plays in enriching the ...
Accounting for over one-twelfth of world trade and by far the largest movement of people across bord...
Abstract This paper will study tourism as a site of citizenship formation with a particular focus o...
In response to a previously published paper on tourist rights by McCabe and Diekmann, it is argued t...
There is an increasing emphasis in tourism research on the role that tourism plays in enriching the ...
Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) increasingly embed international activities in their curricula ...
The year 1993 marked the establishment of formal EU citizenship and, subsequently, special relations...
This article explores global citizenship through the narratives of employees of a Danish travel-rela...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...
This paper reflects on the association of volunteer tourism with global citizenship and argues that ...
The freedom of movement and right to travel are intrinsic to the growth of international tourism. No...
The freedom of movement and right to travel are intrinsic to the growth of international tourism. No...
In the current trend of increasing globalization, relationships are evolving between global and loca...
Accounting for over one-twelfth of world trade and by far the largest movement of people across bord...
Persistent limitations to the industry-centric and resident-centric approaches to tourism highlight ...
There is an increasing emphasis in tourism research on the role that tourism plays in enriching the ...
Accounting for over one-twelfth of world trade and by far the largest movement of people across bord...
Abstract This paper will study tourism as a site of citizenship formation with a particular focus o...
In response to a previously published paper on tourist rights by McCabe and Diekmann, it is argued t...
There is an increasing emphasis in tourism research on the role that tourism plays in enriching the ...
Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) increasingly embed international activities in their curricula ...
The year 1993 marked the establishment of formal EU citizenship and, subsequently, special relations...
This article explores global citizenship through the narratives of employees of a Danish travel-rela...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...