The decline of tourist destinations

Autor(en)
Maximilian Benner
Abstrakt

The term overtourism has generated considerable attention both in academic discourse and public debate. The actual or perceived impact of overtourism on destinations has significant ecological, social, and cultural consequences. However, a crucial question remains unanswered: What does overtourism do to a destination's tourism industry itself? At the core of this question is whether overtourism is a self-limiting phenomenon or a cumulative one, and how precisely overtourism shapes patterns of quantitative or qualitative decline of a destination's tourism sector. This article offers a conceptual discussion of the impact of overtourism on a destination's local tourism sector by refining the latter stages of Butler's tourist area lifecycle through forms of path decline known from evolutionary economic geography. By combining these two theorical approaches and refining the typology of path decline from evolutionary economic geography to the case of tourism under an overtourism scenario, this article suggests that, in the absence of exogenous changes due to policy interventions or public pressure, under an overtourism scenario, a destination's tourism sector might contract, downgrade, dislocate, and eventually even disappear. Further research should focus on how to prevent these forms of path decline.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Geographie und Regionalforschung
Journal
Sustainability
Band
12
Seiten
3653
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/su12093653
Publikationsdatum
05-2020
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
507026 Wirtschaftsgeographie, 507014 Regionalentwicklung
Schlagwörter
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Environmental Science (miscellaneous), Geography, Planning and Development, Energy Engineering and Power Technology, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/f1aeed6c-f660-4182-8840-d6adc5b8576b