Arctic tourism experiences : production, consumption and sustainability /

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: C.A.B. International
Other Authors: Lee, Young-Sook (Tourism professor) (Editor), Weaver, David B. (David Bruce) (Editor), Prebensen, Nina K. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: [Wallingford, Oxfordshire] ; [Boston, Mass.] : CABI, [2017]
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book.
Table of Contents:
  • Arctic destinations and attractions as evolving peripheral settings for the production and consumption of peak tourism experiences
  • Experiencing the arctic in the past : French visitors to Finnmark in the late 1700s and early 1800s
  • Roles of adventure guides in balancing perceptions of risk and safety
  • The central role of identity in the Arctic periphery
  • Tourists and narration in the Arctic : the changing experience of museums
  • World heritage list = tourism attractiveness?
  • Degrees of peripherality in the production and consumption of leisure tourism in Greenland / David Weaver and Laura Lawton
  • Northern lights experiences in the Arctic dark : old imaginaries and new tourism narratives
  • Exploring the extreme Iditarod Trail in Alaska
  • The Arctic tourism experience from an evolving Chinese perspective
  • Tourists' interpretations of a "feelgood in Lapland" holiday : a case study
  • Negotiating Sami place and identity : do Scottish traditions help Sami to be more Sami?
  • Emergence of experience production systems for mass tourism participation in peripheral regions : evidence from Arctic Scandinavia
  • Factors of peripherality : whale watching in northern Norway
  • Responsible fishing tourism in the Arctic
  • Long way up : powered two-wheeled journeys in northern peripheries
  • Experiences of marine adventurers in the Canadian Arctic
  • Arctic tourism in Russia : attractions, experiences, challenges and potentials
  • Tourism experiences of post-Soviet Arctic borderlands
  • Arctic tourism experiences : opportunities, challenges and future research directions for a changing periphery.