ABSTRACT

Outlining the need for fresh perspectives on change in tourism, this book offers a theoretical overview and empirical examples of the potential synergies of applying evolutionary economic geography (EEG) concepts in tourism research. EEG has proven to be a powerful explanatory paradigm in other sectors and tourism studies has a track record of embracing, adapting, and enhancing frameworks from cognate fields. EEG approaches to tourism studies complement and further develop studies of established themes such as path dependence and the Tourism Area Life Cycle. The individual chapters draw from a broad geographical framework and address distinct conceptual elements of EEG, using a diverse set of tourism case studies from Europe, North America and Australia. Developing the theoretical cohesion of tourism and EEG, this volume also gives non-specialist tourism scholars a window into the possibilities of using these concepts in their own research. Given the timing of this publication, it has great potential value to the wider tourism community in advancing theory and leading to more effective empirical research.

chapter 1|18 pages

Why is tourism not an evolutionary science?

Understanding the past, present and future of destination evolution

chapter 2|24 pages

Destination dynamics, path dependency and resilience

Regaining momentum in Danish coastal tourism destinations?

chapter 4|16 pages

Tourism area research and economic geography theories

Investigating the notions of co-evolution and regional innovation systems 1

chapter 6|20 pages

Path dependence in remote area tourism development

Why institutional legacies matter

chapter 8|16 pages

Co-evolution and sustainable tourism development

From old institutional inertia to new institutional imperatives in Niagara

chapter 9|18 pages

Regional development and leisure in Fryslân

A complex adaptive systems perspective through evolutionary economic geography

chapter 10|11 pages

Tourism and economic geography redux

Evolutionary economic geography's role in scholarship bridge construction