The 1st European Conference on Peace through Tourism

December 11th, 2008 | Conferences, Presentations, Publications

The 1st European Conference on Peace and Tourism has received about 400 registrations, and attracted 190 participants from 35 countries. Press on the names of speakers to view their presentations. 

Welcome Address Louis D’Amore
Opening Ceremony Jannewietske de Vries
Opening Ceremony Edmund Bartlett
Plenary 1 Hon Gil da Costa Alves
Plenary 1 Hon N Nandi Ndaitwah
Plenary 2 Hon Phillip Savadoga
Plenary 2 Vasilis Morfopoulos
Plenary 2 John Hummel
Plenary 3 Catherine Rubbens
Plenary 3 Ginger Smith
Plenary 4 Janos Damon
Plenary 4 Senator Tokunbo Afikuyomi
Plenary 4 Luigi Cabrini
Plenary 5 Dallen Timothy
Plenary 5 Irena Ateljevic
Plenary 5 Myriam Jansen Verbeke

Research Project: A Stereotype Diet

July 19th, 2008 | Lectorat

In an overcommunicated society, a borderless communication world, where physical borders have become obsolete in parts of Europe, but where perceptual borders have hardened, the quest for ways to soften cross-cultural unrest has become important and timely. Stereoptypes perpetuate misunderstanding and misconceptions, causing behavioral deseases that feed on prejudice, racism, and xenophobia. Terrorism, growing immigration, and home grown terror -and the why and how of all these and the rest-  have changed people’s behavior towards the others. If stereotypes represent only a minority of negative events and behaviors, what can make the majority “others” get rid of those unrelated yet prevalent steroptypes that are associated to them? Investigating prevalent sterotypes may lead to a sterotype diet. In this case a diet is the process of getting rid of what is useless or harmful, while keeping, augmenting, and even adopting what is useful and representative.

Research Project: Role of tour guiding in promoting peace between Israelis and Palestinians

July 19th, 2008 | Lectorat

Role of tour guides in promoting peace between Israelis and Palestinians is a research project supported by Stenden University. Its goal is to investigate the existing differences and similarities in the interpretive discourse of Israeli and Palestinian tour guides, with the hope of bridging historical, cultural, and geopolitical gaps, hoping to advance pragmatic and progressive recommendations that may contribute to a peaceful coexistance between the two peoples. It is hypothesised that tour guides have different interpretive discourses, thereby distorting the peace ideal of coexistence through their myopic interpretations of cultural and historical tourism sites in the region.

Please check back with us for the results. You may also communicate with us via the “community thread”. Comments and suggestions that can help us understand the complexity of the phenomenon of tour guiding in the region are most welcome.

Second call for Tourism and Peace conference abstracts

July 19th, 2008 | Presentations, Publications

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Of Sappy and Sappiness

July 19th, 2008 | News & Info

It is all about happiness. Although happiness is relative, still, there are those who say that they are happy, and there are those who say they are not. But who are those who are neither happy nor sad? Whenever I think about J.S. Mill’s quote “ask whether I am happy and I cease to be”, I find myself in a state of mind where I am neither happy nor sad. How can I be happy when I know that there are millions of children suffering from curable diseases, who die of starvation, who are trained to use arms, who don’t have the opportunity to go to school, who are stripped of their childhood, who think more about what they are going to eat today than play, who are paying for crimes they have not committed, who would rather die today than think about tomorrow, for today’s miseries never end?

Journal of Tourism and Peace Research

July 12th, 2008 | News & Info

Editor in-Chief: Omar Moufakkir

Associate Editor: Alon Gelbman

Associate Editor: Ian Kelly

Published by Stenden University -ISSN 1878-7754

Papers for the journal should be submitted electronically via email to: omar.moufakkir@stenden.com

Please note this is an online academic journal. Papers submitted are subject to the usual academic processes of anonymous peer reviewing. 

 

Aims and scope

The main aim of The Journal of Tourism and Peace Research is to provide a peer-reviewed forum for the study and discussion of tourism and peace issues in tourism and tourism-related areas of leisure, recreation and hospitality studies. The realities of the 21st Century, including globalization, immigration, terrorism, home-grown terror, made and natural catastrophes, conflicts, stereotypes, perceptions, and rising poverty, necessitate a closer look at the role of tourism. The Journal of Tourism and Peace Research is an international journal that encompasses all aspects of tourism and leisure oriented to peace, cooperation and conflict solutions. Tourism and Peace is broad in scope and deals with many aspects relating to peace, such as appropriate planning, international cooperation, peace through tourism, tourism for peace, tourism in conflict-ridden areas, avoiding negative impacts of tourism, tourism and human rights, peace museums, tourism and attitude change, peace parks, tourism and borders, tourism and cross cultural behaviour and understanding.

Perceptual Borders in a Borderless Century and Impacts on Destination Visitation

June 22nd, 2008 | Conferences

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Cross-cultural behavior in tourism

June 14th, 2008 | Conferences

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Beyond niche markets: Consumer attitudes towards ethical tourism

June 14th, 2008 | Conferences

ethics-in-tourism

Informational-technology-international-communications-and-impacts-on-tourism

June 14th, 2008 | Conferences

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