IAST

Member Activities

 

David Airey

Journal Articles

  • Jinsheng (Jason) Zhu, Airey David and Siriphon Aranya, A (2021): Chinese Outbound Tourism: An Alternative Modernity Perspective, Annals of Tourism Research Vol 87. accepted for publication, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annals.2021.103152
  • Jinsheng (Jason) Zhu, Airey David and Siriphon Aranya, A (2021): Chinese Outbound Tourists in Northern Thailand - A Dynamic Mobility Perspective, Journal of Consumer Culture. accepted for publication

 


 

Dimitrios Buhalis

Project

  • The Encyclopedia of Tourism Management and Marketing, Editor in chief: professor Dimitrios Buhalis, Edward Elgar publishing limited
    This project is progressing and the first entries will be available online in early spring 2021. The entire project will be completed by January 2022.This is a very inclusive project - on the 1st February 2021 more than 1000 authors in 60 countries so far have submitted 976 entries!
    Introduction and Editor's Statement Buhalis, D., 2022, Tourism Management and Marketing in Transformation, in Buhalis, D., (ed) Encyclopedia of Tourism Management and Marketing, EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING (forthcoming), https://www.academia.edu/44983865/

Journal Articles 

 


 

Dianne Dredge

Activities

  • Introducing The Tourism CoLab

    Dianne Dredge would like to invite members of the Academy and tourism academy more broadly to visit The Tourism CoLab's webpage and blog place. The Tourism CoLab was founded in 2019 by Academy member Professor Dianne Dredge after leaving the academic environment. The Tourism CoLab was founded as a collaborative laboratory, a social enterprise for building capacity in the tourism and visitor economies. We adopt the principles of regenerative tourism, for-purpose business models and ecosystems, and transformational visitor experiences. We combine it with decades of design thinking and studio teaching experience to nurture inclusive conversations, think creatively, ideate and co-design actions for better tourism and visitor economies. 
    Associate Professor Jenny Cave (New Zealand) has recently joined the CoLab, working alongside Roberto Daniele (who has set up the The Changemakers' Lab), Dr Giang Phi (social innovation in tourism, Vietnam). All of our collaborators are ex-academics driven by the desire to work stakeholders to drive real impact in communities. Good quality practical education informed by different kinds of knowledge is key. We work with and benefit from the inspiration of Anna Pollock and Professor Emerita Pauline Sheldon.
    CoLab Webpage https://www.thetourismcolab.com.au/ 
    CoLab Blog Place https://www.thetourismcolab.com.au/blog
  • Announcing the new Chair of the Tourism Education Futures Initiative

    TEFI continues to be the leading, forward-looking network inspiring, informing, and supporting tourism researchers, educators and those working in the sector; to transform the world passionately and courageously for the better.

    In June 2020, York St John University hosted the first ever virtual TEFI conference on the theme: What's Tourism got to do with it? Re-purposing tourism: engaging our radical in tourism education. Hosting the conference virtually attracted leading tourism academics and professionals from all over the world to challenge, debate and examine the potential tourism holds and considerations regarding the contribution to a more regenerative form of tourism. While the virtual event pushed some of us outside of our comfort zones it is a testament to one of TEFI's core values of stewardship.

    Stepping into their roles as co-chairs in January 2021, Brendan Paddison (Senior Lecturer, York St. John) and Karla Boluk (Associate Professor, University of Waterloo) have recently virtually engaged the TEFI network by hosting two online visionary workshops on the theme: 'co-creating a TEFI vision', facilitated by Professor Dianne Dredge. The outcome has been the creation of several priority areas (short, medium, and long term) for the network including hosting "power hours", workshops facilitating professional development and mentorship opportunities. Furthermore, we feel it's incumbent we learn from the past. As such, in combination with carrying out a scoping review of the literature on TEFI with the hope to design a research agenda. 
    We plan to engage in a listening tour, seeking the insights of those who were involved in TEFI at the outset to better understand the origins of TEFI. We would like to connect current academics with founders and previous TEFI chairs. We foresee such discussions could take the form of a webinar or podcast available to our wider network. We plan to engage in this process in the spring of 2021. If you are interested in engaging in our listening tour, we would love to hear from you. Please reach out to Karla at kboluk@uwaterloo.ca or Brendan at B.Paddison@yorksj.ac.uk   

  • Tourism in Multicultural Societies - transdisciplinary project

    Tourism and the tourism industry have been criticized for contributing to a uni-dimensional view of culture and people, which (re)produces stereotypic images, discredited histories and romantic fantasies. There is a risk that tourism reduces places to monocultures where the complexity that makes them interesting disappear. No modern society has only a culture, language or identity. Globalization, migration and other intercultural exchanges changes places.

    Professor Can Seng Ooi and Academy member Dianne Dredge participated in the mid-term webinar on 12 February alongside chief investigators and team leaders Drs. Sayaka Osanami Törngren, Eva Maria Jernsand, Helena Kraff and Emma Björner. Website: https://blogg.mau.se/tims/ 

Book

  • Cave, J. And Dredge, D. 2020. Reworking Tourism: Diverse Economies in a Changing World. Routledge
    It has become increasingly clear we need diverse economic models and alternative ways of understanding the value that is produced by tourism. In this edited volume, we set the foundations and explore alternative and diverse economic models in tourism and profile several case studies that extend thinking around diverse kinds of value creation and different kinds of exchange. A key insight from the book is that the 'global north' has much to learn from the innovation and creative collaborations of the 'global south'. This book is part of a journey following on from earlier work by Sheldon, P. and Daniele, R. Social entrepreneurship and tourism (2016), and The Collaborative Economy and Tourism: Perspectives, politics, policies and prospects (Dredge 2017).  Series editors for both books are Pauline Sheldon and Dan Fesenmaier.

 


 

Metin Kozak

Event

  • Invited speaker: Transition in Tourism Research. Delivered to faculty and Ph.D. students at Leeds Beckett Universities, UK, 4 November 2020.

Project

  • EU Erasmus+ KA2 Project
    Received a grant from EU Erasmus+ Strategic Partnership Program for a project on "SMART Tourism Destination increasing citizen's sentiment of sharing local tourism related values through gamification using emerging mobile Apps and SMALL Data analysis-SMARTDEMA (2020-1-TR01-KA203-092920). With a budget of 220,000 Euro, the project will continue for two years and has five partners from Turkey, France, Slovenia, and Netherlands.

 


 

Brian King

Book

  • Peter U. C. Dieke, Brian E. M. King and Richard A. J. Sharpley (eds) (2020) Tourism in Development: Reflective Essays. CABI, Wallingford, UK. https://www.amazon.com/Tourism-Development-Reflective-Peter-Dieke/dp/1789242819.
    This book is dedicated to the contribution to tourism scholarship by academy fellow Prof Kit Jenkins who also contributed the opening chapter and a preface. Many academy fellows contributed. Thank you to our various chapter contributors - David Airey, Tom Baum, Dick Butler, Erik Cohen, Larry Dwyer, Alison Gill, Ulrike Gretzel, Kit Jenkins, Alistair Morrison, (the late) Phillip Pearce, Geoff Wall, Stephen Wanhill, Allan Williams and myself (Brian King).

Journal articles

  • Chark, R., King, B.E.M. & Tang, C.M.F (2021): The Journey from Episode to Evaluation: How Travelers Arrive at Summary Evaluations. Journal of Travel Research, DOI: 10.1177/0047287520981158
  • Ghaderi, Z., King, B.E.M. & Hall, M. (2021): Crisis preparedness of hospitality managers: Evidence from Malaysia. Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Insights, DOI: 10.1108/JHTI-10-2020-0199
  • Koseoglu, M, A., Mehraliyev, F., Aladag, O.F., & King, B.E.M. (2021): Origins, evolution and themes of scholarly hospitality sources: 1960-2019. International Journal of Hospitality Management, DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhm.2020.102817
  • Köseoglu, M,A, & King, B.E.M (2021) Authorship Structures and Collaboration Networks in Tourism Journals Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Education 3(1): 57-65 DOI: 10.1080/10963758.2019.1655433
  • Lejealle, C., King, B.E.M. & Chapuis, J.M.  (2020): Decoding the educational travel decision: destinations, institutions and social influence. Current Issues in Tourism, DOI: 10.1080/13683500.2020.1865287
  • Michelini, C., King, B.E.M. & Tung, V.  (2021): Tracking destination visual narratives: photographic compositions from longer stay tourists. Tourism Recreation Research, DOI: 10.1080/02508281.2020.1864872

Awards

  • Brian King and his co-authors received The Best Article of the Year 2020 in Tourism Recreation Research for their paper entitled "NGOs in ecotourism: patrons of sustainability or neo-colonial agents? Evidence from Africa".
  • Brian King and his co-authors received an Award for Highly Commended Paper in the 2020 Emerald Literati Awards for their paper entitled "Co-Creation and Co-Destruction of Service Quality through Customer-to-Customer Interactions: Why Prior Experience Matters".

Conferences

  • Spoke on the topic "Leading Tourism through Disruption: Time for a Rethink in Asia?" at the 8th ITSA Biennial Hybrid Conference co-hosted and organized by Universitas Pancasila and James Cook University Singapore on 2 December 2020.
  • Participated in an online panel session on the topic "Tourism Education in a Fragile World - A View from Hong Kong" at the Association for Tourism in Higher Education Virtual Conference on 3-4 December 2020.
  • Delivered an online lecture entitled "A Post-Pandemic Future for Tourism Scholarship? – Reflections on Academic Practice Across 3 Continents" at the Dr Abraham Pizam Dean's Distinguished Lecture Series hosted by Rosen College of Hospitality Management on 10 December 2020.

 


 

Haiyan Song

Conferences

  • The Social Costs of Tourism amid COVID-19 (keynote) at the International Conference on Frontier Cross Management, Shandong University, Weihai, China, 7 November 2020
  • Scenario Planning for Visitor Arrivals in Asia Pacific 2021-2023 at a PATA Webinar on 19 January 2021 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOd49l7vS2k&t=1652s)

Journal articles

  • Qiu, R.T.R., Park, J., Li, S. & Song, H. (2020). Social costs of tourism during the COVID-19 pandemic.  Annals of Tourism Research. (DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2020.102994.)
  • Liu, A., Lin, V.S., Li, G. & Song, H. (2020). Ex Ante Tourism Forecasting Assessment. Journal of Travel Research. (DOI: 10.1177/0047287520974456)
  • Hu, M., Qiu, R.T.R., Wu, D.C. & Song, H. (2021). Hierarchical pattern recognition for tourism demand forecasting. Tourism Management. (DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2020.104263)
  • Liu, A. & Song, H. (2021). Analysis and Forecasts of the Demand for Imported Wine in China. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly. (DOI: 10.1177/1938965520981070)

 


 

Arch G. Woodside

Journal articles

  • Pan, B., Smith, W. W., Litvin, S. W., Yuan, Y., & Woodside, A. (2021). Ethnic bias and design factors impact response rates of online travel surveys. Journal of Global Scholars of Marketing Science, 1-16.
  • Jung, J., Ko, E., & Woodside, A. G. (2021). How shoppers' configurations of demographics, sustainability assessments, and place-attractiveness assessments impact who shops in culturally traditional mega-markets. Journal of Business Research122, 640-656.
  • Pappas, I. O., & Woodside, A. G. (2021). Fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA): Guidelines for research practice in Information Systems and marketing. International Journal of Information Management58, 102310.

 


 

Allan Williams

Project

  • Allan Williams, fellow academician Gang Li, and Surrey colleagues Jason Chen and Anyu Liu have been commissioned by the British Tourist Authority and VisitBritain to undertake a comparative international evaluation of the collection and communication of inbound tourism data. 

Journal articles

  • Kim, Y R, Williams A M, Park A, and Chen L (2021) Agglomeration economies and productivity in the tourism  industry: the case o f the UK, Tourism Management v82, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tourman.2020.104201
  • Williams, A M and Balaz V (2020) Tourism and trust: theoretical reflections, Jourrnal of Travel Research DOI: 10.1177/0047287520961177
  • Cristina Figueroa-Domecq, Albert Kimbu, Anna de Jong & Allan M. Williams (2020) Sustainability through the tourism entrepreneurship journey: a gender perspective, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1831001

 

 

 

IAST