ABSTRACT

Neither the tourism industry nor the tourist has responded convincingly to calls for more responsibility in tourism. Ethical consumption places pressure on travellers to manage a large number of decisions at a time when hedonic motivations threaten to override other priorities. Unsurprisingly, tensions occur and compromises are made. This book offers new insight into the motivations that influence tourists and their decision-making. It explores how consumers navigate the responsible tourism market place and provide a rich understanding of the challenges facing those seeking to encourage travellers to become responsible.

Not only will the book provide an improved interpretation of the complexity of ethical consumption in tourism, but it will also offer a variety of stakeholders a deeper understanding of:

  • the key challenges facing stakeholders in the production and consumption of responsible tourism
  • how ethical consumers can be influenced to consume ethically
  • the gaps in consumer knowledge and how to broaden the appeal for individuals to make more informed ethical decisions
  • how tour operators can respond to this emerging market by innovative product development
  • how to design informative marketing communications to encourage a greater uptake for responsible holidays
  • how destinations can tailor their products to the ethical consumer market
  • how destination communities and management organisations can target responsible tourists through the provision of sustainable alternatives to mass-market holiday products.

Written by leading academics from all over the world, this timely and important volume will be valuable reading for ubdergraduate and postgraduate students, researchers and academics interested in Tourism Ethics, Ethical Consumption and the global issue of Sustainability.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

Managing ethical consumption in tourism – compromises and tensions

part I|64 pages

Debates on ethical consumption in tourism

chapter 3|24 pages

You can check out anytime you like but you can never leave

Can ethical consumption in tourism ever be sustainable?

chapter 4|14 pages

Slow tourism

Ethics, aesthetics and consumptive values

chapter 5|11 pages

The evolution of environmental ethics

Reflections on tourism consumption

part II|85 pages

Situating the self in ethical consumption

chapter 6|21 pages

A fresh look into tourist consumption

Is there hope for sustainability? An empirical study of Swedish tourists

chapter 8|12 pages

Travelling goods

Global (self) development on sale

chapter 10|13 pages

Ethical tourism

The role of emotion

part III|81 pages

Helping consumers make ethical decisions

chapter 11|19 pages

Tread lightly through this Lonely Planet

Examining ethical information in travel guidebooks

chapter 12|19 pages

Business travel and the environment

The strains of travelling for work and the impact on travellers' pro-environmental in situ behaviour

chapter 13|18 pages

Medical tourism

Consumptive practice, ethics and healthcare – the importance of subjective proximity

chapter 14|15 pages

Marketing responsible tourism

chapter 15|8 pages

Concluding remarks