Masajes sensuales en pareja Fuencarral-El Pardo
Castillo, E. Más mujeres hermosas: Escort de alto standing Granollers, Putas certificadas Envigado, Putas para hombres Iquitos
To browse Academia. The negative social and environmental impacts of the global tourism industry have been widely documented, yet there is still potential for tourism to function as a force of social justice. From a Marxist perspective, the tourism industry can be understood as a key mechanism by means of which the capitalist system expands and reproduces itself, while from a poststructuralist perspective it can be understood as a central element of neoliberal governance.
Ivan Murray , Macia Blazquez-Salom. Juan Pablo Silva-Escobar. Yobenj Aucardo Chicangana Bayona. Fatal error: XSL transformation failed. Rob Fletcher. Maximiliano E. The Ethics of Sightseeing. Korstanje, M. Gabriela Coronado. Erica Schenkel. Abstract The research deals at a theoretical level with the public significance of tourism and relations with tourism policy as an instrument of governments to intervene in their development.
The originality in the approach is based on the adoption of public policy analysis as a theoretical perspective, reconciling approaches from both tourism and political science. After more than half a century of the first state initiatives, there is not yet a agreement on approaches to the study of tourism policy and its fields of interest: on the one hand, an economic approach has been developed that defines it as a sectoral economic policy; and on the other, an integral perspective, which considers tourism policy a multidisciplinary field.
The analysis shows that political science emerges as a fundamental science for the study of tourism, providing methodological instruments and concepts that facilitate their understanding from a critical perspective. The objective of this article is to analyse a conception of the link between ethics and tourism that can be thought of as an alternative to the predominant one in current tourism theory. To do this, we will start from the evolutionary perspective of morality of two contemporary philosophers: Peter Singer and Joshua Greene.
As it will be argued, parallel to the ethics of tourism and ethical tourism, one can also speak of a moral potentiality of mass cultural tourism, which does not arise from an application of ethical precepts to tourism, but is inherent to the latter.