- Title
- Volunteer tourism as alternative tourism: journeys beyond otherness
- Creator
- Lyons, K. D.; Wearing, S.
- Relation
- Journeys of Discovery in Volunteer Tourism: International Case Study Perspectives p. 3-11
- Relation
- http://bookshop.cabi.org/?site=191&page=2633&pid=2078
- Publisher
- CABI
- Resource Type
- book chapter
- Date
- 2008
- Description
- Seismic changes in leisure time, disposable income, mobility and communication technologies have created a context in which tourism has thrived, grown and diversified to encompass a wide array of leisure travel behaviours that were not imagined even as recently as a couple of decades ago. Leading the way in this process of diversification is alternative tourism, which describes a form of tourism that rebukes mass tourism and the consumptive mindset it engenders and instead offers alternative, more discriminating, socially and environmentally sustaining tourist experiences (Wearing, 2001). The demand for alternative tourism has led to a diverse array of niche products and services, each the subject of critical scholarly analysis including educational tourism, farm tourism, cultural exchange tourism, scientific tourism and volunteer tourism, which is the subject and focus of this book. Definitions of volunteer tourism have begun to emerge in the academic and popular literature and are cited in a number of the case studies presented in this volume. Some of these definitions are relatively narrow in their focus. For example, Wearing (2002) defines volunteer tourists as those who 'volunteer in an organized way to undertake holidays that may involve the aiding or alleviating the material poverty of some groups in society, the restoration of certain environments, or research into aspects of society or environment' (p. 240). This definition uses criteria that limit volunteer tourism to those experiences located within the context of holidays or vacations. Others take a more macro-approach and consider the more inclusive notion of volunteering in tourism as an expression of what is recognized in tourism literature as the "other" dimension of postmodern tourism, which emphasizes the growing appeal of concepts such as "alternative", "real", "ecological", and "responsible" forms of tourism'. While specific definitions are used in some of the contributions to this book to frame individual case studies, we have resisted the temptation to offer an overarching definition of volunteer tourism for this volume. Instead we recognize volunteer tourism as a form of contested alternative tourism.
- Subject
- alternative tourism; volunteer tourism; leisure travel; mass tourism
- Identifier
- uon:6723
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/804772
- Identifier
- ISBN:9781845933807
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