Saturday, October 12, 2019
Definitions of Tourism and Tourists :: Travel, Non-residents
According to Smith (1988), an author of a specialist dictionary on tourism, the word ââ¬Ëtouristââ¬â¢ was reportedly introduced in 1800 and the word ââ¬Ëtourismââ¬â¢ in 1811. However, what exactly is tourism? Who are tourists? Regardless of the fact that both terms have now been part of the English language for over two centuries, there is still no universally acknowledged effective definition for either. For over many decades, researchers and practitioners have produced many precise definitions for both ââ¬Ëtouristââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëtourismââ¬â¢ but no definition of either term has become widely recognised. According to Smith (1988), he suggests that there ââ¬Å"probably never will be a single definition of tourismâ⬠as economists, psychologists and geographers perceive certain things about tourism in their field (Smith 1988 as cited in Leiper 1995:3). However, any approach to defining tourism can be useful for the persons proposing it and for those who perc eive the world in the subjective way. In this essay, academic authors such as Krapf and Hunziker (1942), Stear (2005) and McIntosh and Goeldner (1977) each define ââ¬Ëtourismââ¬â¢ in different methodical approaches. After discussing ââ¬Ëtourismââ¬â¢, the focus then shifts to ââ¬Ëtouristsââ¬â¢ where again, Stear (2005), Leiper (1979) and Weaver and Lawton (2006), defines ââ¬Ëtouristsââ¬â¢ and its heuristic concepts. One of the first attempts to define tourism was that of two Swiss academics, Professors Hunziker and Krapf of Berne University. They defined tourism in a 1942 study as a complex of environmental impacts: ââ¬Å"the sum of the phenomena and relationships arising from the travel and stay of non-residents, in so far as they do not lead to permanent residence and are not connected to any earning activity.â⬠This definition has been acknowledged by many international associations including the International Association of Scientific Experts on Tourism (AIEST). The advantages of this definition are is acknowledgements of wide-ranging impacts; it bases a very large number of issues that is studied under the name ââ¬Ëtourismââ¬â¢. Additionally, Krapf and Hunzikerââ¬â¢s definition is highly intellectual as they manage to distinguish tourism from migration however; its theory is based on ââ¬Å"travel and stayâ⬠making an assumption that this is necessary for tourism, thus preventing day tours. While the definitionââ¬â¢s approach is reasonable, the definition is noticeably ââ¬Å"too vagueâ⬠(Leiper, 1995: 17) as it includes a huge amount of human activity that few thinking individuals would regard as coming within the scope of tourism. Because of their broad definition on tourism, prisoners, hospital patients, boarding students and soldiers at war can easily fit in the definition, thus exposing a major defect.
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