ABSTRACT

Tourism in Cuba - described by Fidel Castro as 'the evil we have to have' - has been regarded both with ambivalence, and as a crucial aspect of development and poverty alleviation. The result is a remarkable approach to tourism, one which often compels tourists to become agents of development through solidarity. Drawing on her experiences of working in an NGO in Cuba, the author uses a multi-sited ethnographic approach to investigate tourism motivations and experiences, and to examine the very nature of development. Her analysis covers a wide range of issues including social change, globalization, social theory, and sustainability. Also discussed is the way in which tourism in Cuba relates to broader debates surrounding transformation, capacity building, social action and solidarity.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

Cuba: Rhythm, Resilience and Revolution

part I|52 pages

Critical Perspectives Underpinning Development and Tourism

chapter Chapter 1|22 pages

Development and the Rise of Tourism as a Strategy

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

Moral Routes to a New Tourism

part II|54 pages

On the Ground: Cuba, Social Development, and NGO Study Tours

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

Social Development in Revolutionary Cuba

chapter Chapter 4|36 pages

Tourist Encounters with Endogenous Development

part III|66 pages

Rights-based Tourists in Cuba

chapter Chapter 5|26 pages

Motivations of New Moral tourists

chapter Chapter 6|32 pages

Transformation and Agency in the Tourism Encounter

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Other Transformations: Rights-based Development to Rights-based Tourism