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Lecture 10 GEOG2057 1

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views19 pages

Lecture 10 GEOG2057 1

Uploaded by

Charmaine Wong
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Geography, leisure

and recreation in
Asia
Leisure and Recreation in Modern Society
GEOG2057
Lecture 10
Room: KK201
Thursdays 430pm – 620pm
Dr Ben Iaquinto
iaquinto@[Link]
Office: 10.33
Lecture Overview
• Tourism in Asia

• Leisure in China

• Modern mass tourism in China

• Chinese tourism vs Western tourism (similarities and


differences)

• Transport and infrastructure issues in Asian tourism

• Human resource and labour issues in Asian tourism

• Tourism policies and politics in Asia

• Modern mass tourism in Asia: theoretical issues

• Eurocentrism in tourism research


Tourism in Asia

• Growth forecasts: Asia and the Pacific will comprise 30% of international
arrivals in 2030 (535 million people)

• Employment and human resources: training, education and linkages


between tourism and other economic sectors (ie. agriculture, transport)

• Cross-border tourism development: unrealized potential for extending


visitation lengths and multi-destination marketing

• Planning: infrastructure required to cope with urbanisation


Defining
Asia
Leisure in
China
• Leisure as a temporal resource (xianxia)

• Leisure as a spiritual good in the lives of


all people (xiuxian)

• Derogatory term ‘xiaoqian’ means to


while away time or divert oneself

• In the Baixingnese language code: wan


means ‘having fun’; fubai (FB) means
‘corrupt’
Chinese tourism vs Western tourism:
differences and similarities

• Chinese tourism development is new: double digit


growth in GDP for the past twenty years

• Government involvement in tourism: growth of tourism


in China is closely tied with the role of the Chinese
government and its policies.

• Pro-poor rural tourism initiatives: Chinese policy has


promoted tourism as a means of income and
employment generation in the poorer and more
marginalized areas of China

• The role of regulation: innovation and change vs unruly


Transport and infrastructure issues in
Asian tourism

• Air transport issues: push to develop a single


aviation market across ASEAN countries

• Marine and cruise tourism issues:


infrastructure, political relations and the
preferences of Asian tourists

• Belt and Road Initiative: China plans to link


Southeast Asia to China via high speed rail
Human resource and labour issues in
Asian tourism

• Supply and demand issues: low pay, long


working hours, lack of career advancement
opportunities

• Political factors: many Asian countries are


opening up economically, increasing private
sector jobs

• Migrant labour: relaxed immigration policies


among ASEAN countries

• Labour market practices and wages: dominated


by part-time, casual and temporary jobs
Tourism policies and politics in
Asia

• Politics of mobility: states have the power to


render their citizens and visitors immobile

• Bilateral and multilateral agreements:


tourism patterns in Asia are changing
because of shifting economic and trade
policies in the region

• Tourism and political instability: tourism may


thrive in authoritarian countries because of
their stability, and tourism can be used by
these regimes to improve their public image
Modern mass tourism in Asia:
theoretical issues

How tourism is conventionally understood

(i) tourism is based on interactions between ‘hosts


and guests’;

(ii) hosts are members of traditional communities


usually in the developing world;

(iii) the guests are from affluent societies in the


developed world;

(iv) interactions are characterized by income


Eurocentrism in tourism
research

• The dominance of research from the Western nations


perpetuates Eurocentric knowledge production in
tourism

• A dominant tourism theory – that tourists are on a


search for authenticity – doesn’t fit the behavior of
mainland Chinese tourists

• Tourism research must move away from assuming a


singular point of dissemination of tourism, and avoid
prioritizing particular motivations for tourism

• A mobilities perspective could help to theorize


Video:
Popular tourist destination, Island of Phuket
finds ways to rebound amid COVID-19 l Nightline

• ABC News, October 2021

• [Link]
X3bb6Z79c
Summary

• Asia is both a major source of tourists as


well as a tourist destination

• Increases in leisure and tourism across


Asia reflect growing affluence and
consumer spending among people in
Asia

• The fortunes of the global economy


increasingly depend on Asian economies
Key Points to
Remember

• Domestic tourism is huge in many Asian


countries (China, India, Indonesia) - more
research is required to understand domestic
tourism

• Modernist theories of tourism were developed in


Western countries and are thus limited in their
applicability to Asia.

• Eurocentrism in tourism research holds back the


theoretical development of tourism and hinders
deeper understandings of the Asian context
Conclusion

• A key theme is mobility: transport infrastructure,


mobility politics, rural-to-urban migration, labour
mobility and the (im)mobility of Western-based
theories of tourism

• While Asia is a tourist hub, challenges in the areas


of environment, labour, politics, transport and
COVID-19 might curtail future growth

• Cross-border issues and political disagreements


will also be a consistent feature of Asian tourism
Further Reading
Next week: leisure study as a cross-
disciplinary field
• Understanding how different disciplines have approached the study of
leisure

• What would a cross-disciplinary study of leisure reveal that single


disciplinary approaches couldn’t?

• Why would leisure require a cross-disciplinary approach?

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