J
Jan O.J. Lundgren
Researcher at McGill University
Publications - 9
Citations - 283
Jan O.J. Lundgren is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Recreation. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 272 citations.
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The impact of tourism in the Caribbean: A methodological study
Theo L. Hills,Jan O.J. Lundgren +1 more
TL;DR: Hills and Lundgren as mentioned in this paper examined some economic, cultural and ecological problems arising from the impact of tourism in the Caribbean, and the possibility of predicting saturation of tourist destinations by means of an irritation index.
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The tourist frontier of Nouveau Quebec: Functions and regional linkages
TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the tourist frontier of New Quebec, a wilderness destination environment with the purpose of arriving at a more accurate account of how such a destination has developed, how its present tourist services function, and how they link up with the region.
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On access to recreational lands in dynamic metropolitan hinterlands
TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that even if one can arrive at reasonably accurate measurements of recreational demand levels, it is exceedingly difficult to construct a set of mechanisms, which in a coordinated way can monitor the supply, and the same time can do this according to principles consistent with good land management.
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Geographic concepts and the development of tourism research in Canada
TL;DR: In the early 1950s, R.I. Wolfe's impact studies of vacation destinations in Ontario were conducted by government agencies and private corporations having a stake in tourism-Parks Canada, the Canadian Office of Tourism and the Canadian Pacific Corporation as mentioned in this paper.
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The development of the tourist travel systems: A metropolitan economic hegemony par excellence?
TL;DR: In this article, the authors illustrate a development sequence of a number of interrelated elements into a strongly tied total transport mechanism for individual travelling, drawn from the geographically far-flung mechanism which serves international tourist travel and especially the relationships, more or less rigid at different periods of the evolution, of the travel system between travel generating and destination areas.