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Recursos bibliográficos en papel y digitales - - libros, artículos de revistas,
ponencias de eventos, etc. -
» Resultado:
4 registros
Registro 1 de 4 |
Autor: |
Harrison, David - |
Título: |
Barbados or Luton? Which way to paradise? |
Fuente: |
Tourism Management. v.18, n.6 |
Páginas: |
pp. 393-398 |
Año: |
Sept. 1997 |
Resumen: |
This paper reviews and comments upon Graham Dann’s recent book, The Language of Tourism: a Socialinguistic Perspective. Is the language of tourism little more than the langyage of advertising, or has it a specific syntax and grammar of its own? And how do tourists read this language, and does the internet prove to be more effective than the brochure? These are some of the issues touched upon in this discursive paper. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA T + datos de Fuente |
Registro 2 de 4 |
Autor: |
Harrison, David - |
Título: |
Development of tourism in swaziland |
Fuente: |
Annals of Tourism Research. v.22, n.1. Pergamon |
Páginas: |
pp. 135-156 |
Año: |
1995 |
Resumen: |
The paper analyzes the development of tourism in Swaziland with specific reference to Butler’s concept of a tourism destination area cycle. Tourism in this African Kingdom evolved in five stages: exploration, inactivity, transition, truncated development, and decline and attempted rejuvenation. Its divergence from Butler’s ideal type is analyzed in some detail, but is attributed primarily to external factors beyond Swazi control. Initial tourism developments occurred while the country was a British colony and, as in Lesotho and Botswana, with which Swaziland is compared, further expansion was conditioned by the country’s position as a periphery of the Republic of South Africa. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
Registro 3 de 4 |
Autor: |
Harrison, David - |
Título: |
Tourism and prostitution: sleeping with the enemy? : The case of Swaziland |
Fuente: |
Tourism Management. v.15, n.6 |
Páginas: |
pp. 435-443 |
Año: |
Dec. 1994 |
Resumen: |
International tourism is often alleged to cause or exacerbate female prostitution, and tourism in Swaziland is said to have been based on ’the export of vice’. However, prostitution was considered a ’problem’ in that country decades before the tourist industry developed and juvenile ’immorality’ was investigated in two important reports in 1956 and 1970. Prostitution was primarily associated with westernization and modernity, especially with migrant labour to the mines of the Republic of South Africa, with the growth of the cash economy and with the development of urban centres. As tourism developed, prostitution shifted from mining areas to hotels but, in so far as tourists of different types became clients of prostitutes, such relationships were but one form of behaviour banned in the Republic of South Africa and there is little evidence that Swazi tourism is based to a significant extent on prostitution of any kind. |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA T + datos de Fuente |
Registro 4 de 4 |
Autor: |
Gomez-Ibanez, Jose-A - Harrison, David, Jr |
Título: |
Imports and the Future of the U.S. Automobile Industry |
Fuente: |
American Economic Review. v.72, n.2. American Economic Association |
Páginas: |
pp. 319-23 |
Año: |
May 1982 |
Solicitar por: |
HEMEROTECA A + datos de Fuente |
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