4.1 Article

Tourist Studies: 20th Anniversary reflective commentary - On the need for sustainable tourism consumption

Journal

TOURIST STUDIES
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 96-107

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1468797620986087

Keywords

de-growth; economic growth model; sustainable consumption; sustainable tourism

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The paper argues that the main issue with achieving sustainable tourism lies in the continuation of an economic growth model and suggests adopting sustainable consumption levels as a solution. However, even among environmentally aware post-millennial generation, voluntary limiting of tourism consumption is unlikely. Therefore, the path to sustainable tourism production and consumption lies in effective regulation.
Sustainable tourism has remained the dominant tourism development paradigm within both academic and policy circles for more than three decades. However, little if any progress has been made towards implementing sustainable tourism in practice. Reflecting on this failure to achieve a more sustainable tourism sector, manifested not least in its increasing contribution to climate change, this paper argues that the problem lies in the continuing adherence to the economic growth model that underpins (sustainable) development policies in general and tourism development in particular. Highlighting the unsustainability of unabated growth, the paper goes on to suggest that the solution lies in the adoption of sustainable (reduced) levels of consumption. Yet, based on a recent exploratory study, voluntary limiting the consumption of tourism, even amongst the allegedly environmentally aware post-millennial generation, is an unlikely scenario. Hence, the path to sustainable tourism production and consumption lies only in effective regulation.

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