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1.
Geohumanities ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2286999

ABSTRACT

During the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, a group of academic geographers got together across borders to share our varied experiences. In this paper we illustrate how this storying of pandemia helped us critically and collaboratively understand, (re)imagine and reconfigure ways of living during a global pandemic. We were especially interested in exploring different forms and practices of collective thinking and academic labour, within and beyond the academy. This paper foregrounds emotions and lived experiences, power and positionality, natures, bodies, and relations, and how they have come to our attention in new, different, or more pronounced ways, through everyday geographies of pandemia. Our aim is to emphasise two important aspects: that pandemia is a state of being with/as/through pandemic, and, as a collective noun, pandemia centres plurality, focusing on the potential to attend to the ways experiences of pandemic are redolent with multiple, overlapping exclusions and belongings, openings and closures. © 2023 American Association of Geographers.

2.
Socialising Tourism: Rethinking Tourism for Social and Ecological Justice ; : 214-228, 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1879578

ABSTRACT

Neoliberal approaches to tourism have typically focused on economic growth, contributing to a “Tragedy of the Commons” in terms of degradation of shared resources. This has significant adverse effects on the social and environmental well-being of host communities. In a post-COVID-19 era, where the tourism industry has already suffered significant impacts, the adverse effects of neoliberal tourism will be compounded if there is no change to economic models of “growth”. In the age of climate change, we know that there are social and ecological limits to that growth, but responsible and sustainable tourism approaches do not go far enough to address the challenges highlighted by COVID-19 and future crises. What we need now is transformative change in a way that socialises tourism within social and ecological planetary boundaries. Buen Vivir can act as a guide for socialising tourism towards transformative change by reframing tourism objectives, with greater emphasis on the collective well-being of host communities and their natural environment. This would place the focus on the benefits to communities and their ecological and social limits rather than just on the desire of the traveller, seeking to address the growing inequalities on vulnerable host communities. Buen Vivir offers a guide to “reset tourism” in the post-COVID-19 era in the fight against the commodification of people, places and public commons for tourism development. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Freya Higgins-Desbiolles, Adam Doering and Bobbie Chew Bigby.

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