This is quite fitting for tourism scholars, who have traditionally grappled with issues
of indivisibility of tourism impacts, problems with discerning human-caused
impacts from natural impacts, and issues of comparisons at multiple and interlocking
scales. Also, integration of the three broad approaches – spatial, behavioural,
reflexive – remains a challenge, although more recently there has been some improvement.
For example, using Goa, India as a case study, Saldanha (2002) discussed
tourism as a crucial commodifying and politicizing force in global capitalism,
and provided a critique of Goan identity from spatial, behavioural and reflexive
perspectives.
This is quite fitting for tourism scholars, who have traditionally grappled with issuesof indivisibility of tourism impacts, problems with discerning human-causedimpacts from natural impacts, and issues of comparisons at multiple and interlockingscales. Also, integration of the three broad approaches – spatial, behavioural,reflexive – remains a challenge, although more recently there has been some improvement.For example, using Goa, India as a case study, Saldanha (2002) discussedtourism as a crucial commodifying and politicizing force in global capitalism,and provided a critique of Goan identity from spatial, behavioural and reflexiveperspectives.
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