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World Tourism

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Title: World Tourism


1
World Tourism
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The Development of Tourism in Goa, India
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Activities
  1. Create a table and of tourism in Goa under
    the following headings environment, economy,
    social/cultural influences. Fill this in as we go
    along.
  2. Can the enclave model be related to Goa?
  3. Overall, has tourism been a good development
    plan?

6
Goa An Introduction
  • Goa is a small state on the west coast of India
    with a population of 1.16 million. It was a
    Portuguese colony for 300 years (1440-1740)
    although the Portuguese influence was restricted
    to the coastal areas. We can see this
    particularly well in the 'Old Conquest' area,
    which is the part of Goa most popular with
    European tourists In contrast, Indian tourists
    tend to visit areas further inland which have
    Hindu temples, such as Ponda.
  • The tourist boom began in the 1960s when young
    people, rejecting conventional society of the
    developed countries, travelled to Goa. They
    brought 'hippie' tourism to this part of India
    and even in 1995 all foreign tourists in Goa are
    known locally as 'hippies'.

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The governments plan
  • In the mid-1980s, the Indian Government drew up a
    Tourist Development Plan designating Goa as a
    tourist development area.
  • The plan proposed a wide range of tourist
    facilities with large five-star hotels as well as
    smaller, cheaper hotels.

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Environmental concerns
  • Building close to the shore line -the law was
    then changed permitting hotel companies to build
    as close as 200 meters to the beaches.
  • Increasing numbers of high-rise buildings -
    Originally, the legal limit for the height of
    buildings across all of Goa was two storeys, so
    that no building should be higher than the palm
    trees. However, pressure from hotel developers
    has meant a change in building regulations so
    that there are now three- and four-storey hotels

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More serious environmental concerns
  • The sewerage system -During the peak season,
    between October and May, there is a massive
    influx of tourists to Goa. However, there is no
    adequate sewerage system to cope with the
    increase in numbers of people. Most hotels,
    therefore, discharge their wastes directly into
    the sea.
  • Water supply - The hotels in Goa require enormous
    quantities of fresh water for washing, swimming
    pools and the irrigation of gardens. In fact,
    clean drinking water is piped directly to some
    hotels, while many local people do not even have
    water on tap in their homes.
  • Waste disposal
  • This is a relatively recent problem. The hotels,
    restaurants and shops buy food packed in plastic
    containers which soon litter the streets. At
    present, there is no co-coordinated refuse
    collection or waste management in Goa.

10
  • Child Prostitution profits from tourism rarely
    reach the local people.
  • Acid parties raves children skip school to
    peddle drugs to western tourists.
  • Tourists insult locals by sunbathing nude.
  • One 5 hotel consumes as much water as 5
    villages.
  • One tourist consumes 28x more electricity than a
    local Goan.
  • No real respect or understanding given to local
    carnivals culture.
  • Tourist boats pollute the water scare fish
    away.
  • Many beaches inaccessible problematic for
    fishermen.
  • Many palm trees cut down for development.

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  • From The Curtain of AffluenceLook behind the
    curtain,Tourist, and see what I have
    seen.You're living an illusion,but my life is
    reality.

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Ecotourism in Belize
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Belize- An Introduction
  • British colony between 1638 and 1981, Belize is
    a small country on the edge of the Caribbean Sea.
    Belize particularly welcomes tourists who seek
    the attractions of a varied, natural, unspoilt
    environment. You will experience the wilds of
    over 2000 km2 untouched mangrove swamps, wetland
    savanna, mountain pine forests as well as
    tropical rain forests. In every area there is a
    vast mix of wildlife including the jaguar, howler
    monkey, tapir and manatee. At the coast, we can
    offer you the longest barrier reef in the western
    hemisphere - second longest in the world!
  • You can also see tremendous archaeological sites
    in Belize. Remains of the Mayan.

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Development Strategy
  • Belize is almost totally undeveloped and only 15
    per cent of its land area is cultivated). As a
    country that recently gained its independence
    from the British (1981) Belize is now keen to
    increase its income. In 1992 Belize only had a
    per capita GNP of US2200 while 20 per cent of
    its population of 203 957 were unemployed. The
    Belize government therefore sees tourism as
    essential for increasing foreign exchange
    earnings.

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Activities
  • 1. According to Butler's model, at what stage of
    development is tourism in Belize?
  • 2. Decide whether you would like to visit
    Belize. List those features that attract you,
    are not interesting to you.

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The tourism industry begins
  • The government of Belize advertises the country
    as 'friendly and unspoilt', and as 'Belize - so
    natural'. Although the country is in the early
    stages of developing its tourist industry, it is
    keen to avoid the problems associated with mass
    tourism - pollution high-rise resorts crowding
    a deteriorating natural environment. Belize
    therefore promotes small-scale development and
    tries to foster sustainable tourism.
  • However, each year increasing numbers of visitors
    are arriving in Belize. In 1994, tourist arrivals
    were about 200 000 per annum but the average
    growth rate stands at 43 per cent. Much of this
    growth is because of Belize's position close to
    some of the world's mass tourist resorts. It is
    only a short trip from the tourist 'crowds' of
    Miami and New Orleans in the USA, and Cancun in
    Mexico, to the relative remoteness of Belize

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Sustainable tourism
  • The government of Belize has designated over 30
    per cent of the entire land area as national
    reserves. As part of this scheme, farming is
    banned in the reserves because the government is
    concerned that both traditional, subsistence,
    'slash-and-burn' cultivation and more commercial
    farming will upset the local ecosystem - and so
    threaten the country's ecotourism potential.
  • The government has, though, tried to consider the
    subsistence farmers living on the reserves. Thus,
    efforts are being made to incorporate the
    farmers' needs with the needs of the growing
    tourist industry. For example, at the Community
    Baboon Sanctuary, local farmers have agreed to
    limit their slash-and-burn practices and so
    protect the habitat of the native howler monkeys.
    In return, the farmers receive an income from
    work in tourism as more tourists are attracted to
    the area.

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Development
  • The challenge for Belize's government is to cope
    with increasing numbers of tourists while
    protecting the country's fragile ecosystem.
    Development, of whatever size, therefore requires
    careful planning.
  • Along the coast, development has involved the
    clearing of mangrove swamps in the north to make
    room for hotels. However, mangroves perform vital
    ecological functions without which, the whole
    coastal area is at risk. Primarily, the mangroves
    provide rich feeding grounds for fish. Secondly,
    the swamps protect against coastal erosion.
  • On the island of Caye Caulker, the recent
    building of an airstrip has destroyed nesting
    sites. It has also created a lake of stagnant
    water which may provide a breeding ground for
    malaria-carrying mosquitoes.

26
Write a dialogue between Belize's minister for
tourism, trying to promote tourism for maximum
economic gain, and the environment minister,
trying to minimise the impact of tourism and
protect the welfare of local people. a Consider
the tensions and problems these ministers face
including how tourism might affect the lives
of people living in rural Belize how
increasing numbers of tourists are putting
pressure on the government to develop along more
commercial lines. b Try to agree on a plan for
the future of tourism in Belize.
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