BELLE, N. and BRAMWELL, B. (2005). Climate change and small island tourism: policy maker and industry perspectives in Barbados. Journal of travel research, 44 (1), 32-41. [Article]
Abstract
Tourism in many small island developing states is vulnerable
to potential impacts of climate change. Policies related
to climate change and tourism depend on value-driven decisions
made in the context of uncertainty and complex socioeconomic,
cultural, and political relationships. Debates on
policies for climate change and tourism are influenced by
varied individual and group responses. This article examines
the views of policy makers and tourism managers in
Barbados on potential climate change impacts on the island’s
tourism industry, and their preferred policies in response
to them. Many considered it very likely there will be
damage to coastal tourism facilities, beach changes, and adverse
effects on marine ecosystems. Both groups saw increasing
public awareness as the most appropriate policy response.
Tourism managers were less inclined to regard
policy responses as very appropriate, perhaps being more
cautious about policy interventions. Future research
directions for “postnormal science” related to this topic are
also identified.
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