scholarly journals Combining Conventional Statistics and Big Data to Map Global Tourism Destinations Before COVID-19

2021 ◽  
pp. 004728752110514
Author(s):  
Czesław Adamiak ◽  
Barbara Szyda

World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) is the major source of internationally comparable data on tourism. However, UNWTO data has two drawbacks: it focuses on international trips and ignores differences between regions within individual countries. Alternative sources of big data are increasingly used to enhance tourism statistics. In this paper, we combine traditional information sources with gridded population dataset and Airbnb data to address the limitations of UNWTO statistics. We produce a map of world tourism destinations measured by the number of tourism visits and tourism expenditure in 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic. We then identify hot spots of tourism and compare the level of spatial concentration of tourism to that of global population and economy. The results illustrate how supply and demand shape the global distribution of tourism, highlight the dominance of domestic travels in global tourism mobility and may help planning tourism policy in the face of current global challenges.

1994 ◽  

Included in successive World Tourism Organization (WTO) General Programmes of Work has been a study programme on tourism forecasts started in 1988/ 89. The general objectives of this study programme are specified as: ·Identification of major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region; ·Analysis of their impact on the various sectors of tourism trade; ·Implications for policy making and relevant strategies. Phase 1 of the project, named Global Tourism Forecasts to the Year 2000 and Beyond, and conducted in 1990, resulted in a discussion paper highlighting the major issues in tourism development, particularly the qualitative aspects which shape the way tourism grows. The findings were presented at the WTO Executive Council meeting in December 1990 in Goa, India, as well as at technical seminars held subsequently in association with regional commission meetings and the Organization’s General Assembly in September/ October 1991 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The feedback obtained during this programme of discussion and debate on the Phase 1 findings assisted in the design of Phase 2 work, which started in 1992 and was completed in 1993.


1994 ◽  

Included in successive World Tourism Organization (WTO) General Programmes of Work has been a study programme on tourism forecasts started in 1988/89. The general objectives of this study programme are specified as: ·To identify major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region; ·Their impact on the various sectors of tourism trade; ·Implications for policy making and relevant strategies. This present report constitutes Volume 5: Europe. It is structured in two parts (the first presenting the global perspective, the second dealing specifically with the European region), plus an overall summary of main findings, conclusions and recommendations, and this introduction. In addition, there are three appendices containing administrative, reference and technical information.


1994 ◽  

Included in successive World Tourism Organization (WTO) General Programmes of Work has been a study programme on tourism forecasts started in 1988/ 89. The general objectives of this study programme are specified as: ·Identification of major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region; ·Analysis of their impact on the various sectors of tourism trade; ·Implications for policy making and relevant strategies. Phase 1 of the project, named Global Tourism Forecasts to the Year 2000 and Beyond, and conducted in 1990, resulted in a discussion paper highlighting the major issues in tourism development, particularly the qualitative aspects which shape the way tourism grows. The findings were presented at the WTO Executive Council meeting in December 1990 in Goa, India, as well as at technical seminars held subsequently in association with regional commission meetings and the Organization’s General Assembly in September/ October 1991 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The feedback obtained during this programme of discussion and debate on the Phase 1 findings assisted in the design of Phase 2 work, which started in 1992 and was completed in 1993.


1994 ◽  

Included in successive World Tourism Organization (WTO) General Programmes of Work has been a study programme on tourism forecasts started in 1988/ 89. The general objectives of this study programme are specified as: ·Identification of major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region; ·Analysis of their impact on the various sectors of tourism trade; ·Implications for policy making and relevant strategies. Phase 1 of the project, named Global Tourism Forecasts to the Year 2000 and Beyond, and conducted in 1990, resulted in a discussion paper highlighting the major issues in tourism development, particularly the qualitative aspects which shape the way tourism grows. The findings were presented at the WTO Executive Council meeting in December 1990 in Goa, India, as well as at technical seminars held subsequently in association with regional commission meetings and the Organization’s General Assembly in September/ October 1991 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The feedback obtained during this programme of discussion and debate on the Phase 1 findings assisted in the design of Phase 2 work, which started in 1992 and was completed in 1993.


1994 ◽  

Included in successive World Tourism Organization (WTO) General Programmes of Work has been a study programme on tourism forecasts started in 1988/ 89. The general objectives of this study programme are specified as: ·Identification of major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region; ·Analysis of their impact on the various sectors of tourism trade; ·Implications for policy making and relevant strategies. Phase 1 of the project, named Global Tourism Forecasts to the Year 2000 and Beyond, and conducted in 1990, resulted in a discussion paper highlighting the major issues in tourism development, particularly the qualitative aspects which shape the way tourism grows. The findings were presented at the WTO Executive Council meeting in December 1990 in Goa, India, as well as at technical seminars held subsequently in association with regional commission meetings and the Organization’s General Assembly in September/ October 1991 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The feedback obtained during this programme of discussion and debate on the Phase 1 findings assisted in the design of Phase 2 work, which started in 1992 and was completed in 1993.


1990 ◽  

The World Tourism organization (UNWTO) has initiated study programme on tourism to the year 2000 as part of its general work programme requested by members. The general objective of the study programme is specified as being: To identify the major trends in tourism supply and demand worldwide and by region and their impact on the various sectors of tourism trades; together with implications for policy making and relevant strategies.


Author(s):  
Loykie Lomine

The global tourism industry may provide millions of jobs and billions of enjoyable days for travellers and holiday-makers, but it also requires ethical consideration. This chapter starts by examining the ethics of global tourism around two questions: Firstly, are some tourist destinations unethical? Secondly, are some forms of tourism unethical? These two thematic presentations, based on many examples and controversies, are followed by a short discussion of two key concepts which help conceptualize the ethics of global tourism: exploitation and sustainability. The adoption of a Global Code of Ethics for Tourism by the United Nations World Tourism Organization in 1999, the publication of articles) and then books about tourism ethics, the implementation of corporate social responsibility policies in the tourist industry, as well as the increasing demand for ethical tourism products all show that ethics has now entered global tourism, both in practice and in theory.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cláudia Henriques ◽  
Manuela Guerreiro ◽  
Júlio Mendes

Cultural Tourism is a promising market segment with higher growth rates than other niches. World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) data indicate that the proportion of international trips accounted for cultural motivations grew from 37% in 1995 to 40% in 2004. Additionally, UNWTO (2015) considers that this type of tourism could, in the future, increase competitiveness, create employment opportunities, generate income for investment in preservation, and simultaneously contribute to a sense of pride and self-esteem among host communities. In this article the authors propose a reflection on cultural tourism, based on the questioning of concepts such as tourism and culture, experiences and transformations. To this purpose, this paper aims to come up with a framework upon which tourism destinations can develop culture-based tourism products.


Author(s):  
Sergey V. Ryazantsev ◽  
◽  
Alexey V. Smirnov ◽  

The novel of the Nobel Prize winner in literature Albert Camus "The Plague" became one of the most widely read books in Europe during the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. A number of researchers consider Camus to be an existentialist writer. Existentialism arises, after two bloody wars, to give answers to questions that concern humanity. Since Albert Camus wrote the novel during the Second World War, he understands the plague not only as a disease, but also as German soldiers, whom the inhabitants of France called the "brown plague" because the invaders wore brown shirts. As the inhabitants of the city of Oran resisted the plague on the pages of the work, so the inhabitants of France fought against Nazism and fascism. A. Camus in the novel "The Plague" describes the quarantine measures that take place in the city of Oran in the 40s of the XX century. The consequences of the epidemic and the behavior of the residents described in the novel have much in common with modern coronavirus realities: the decline of the economy, the growth of the number of unemployed, protests against the quarantine measures introduced; the introduction of curfews, the creation of new medicines, etc. In Russia, as in the pages of the novel, there is a decline in the economy. Thus, during the pandemic in Russia, the number of registered unemployed increased from 1.3 million people to 4.8 million, and the appeal to employment centers for support measures increased from 20% to 80%. Camus in his novel writes about the creation of an anti-plague serum, in Russia, the first in the world, a vaccine against coronavirus infection "Sputnik V" was created. The director of the hotel, described in the work, said that due to the epidemic and quarantine, the tourist business disappeared. According to the World Tourism Organization — tourism at the end of 2020 it has decreased by 77% compared to 2019, which is equivalent to the tourist activity that was recorded in the late 80s. Stray animals were shot in Oran, because they believed that they could be carriers of infection. In China, during the Covid-19 pandemic, pets were thrown out of windows because people believed that they could be the source of Covid-19, and in Denmark, more than 11 million minks were exterminated for the same reasons. The authors of this article attempted to analyze the development of the epidemiological process in the novel and plot the mortality rate from the plague according to the data of the work.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-146
Author(s):  
Antonella Bianchino ◽  
Daniela Fusco ◽  
Daniele Pisciottano

In 2018, according to the World Tourism Organization (WTO), the number of arrivals of international tourists worldwide reached 1.4 billion, which represents enormous potential for the sector and global economies. According to WTO, Italy is in the top ten of the countries with the greatest tourism competitiveness thanks above all to its natural and cultural resources. Today, in the globalized world, tourists are pressed by the opinion of travelers, the number of times that a location is mentioned and in which way influencers marketing consider it. The aim of this work is to create a composite indicator that allows us to evaluate the tourist competitiveness of Italian cities by evaluating both the data on the receptivity and the opinions of travelers. To do this, the official data of Istat have been taken together with Big Data, in particular information from the main holiday home platform and the opinions of travelers expressed on Twitter. Subjective and objective indicators have been produced. The results allow us to build a rating list of Italian touristic cities. Keywords: tourism, composite indicator, Big Data, Open Data, ranking


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