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Noel Scott

Researcher at Griffith University

Publications -  221
Citations -  7538

Noel Scott is an academic researcher from Griffith University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tourism & Tourism geography. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 208 publications receiving 6354 citations. Previous affiliations of Noel Scott include University of the Sunshine Coast & University of Queensland.

Papers
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Destination and enterprise management for a tourism future.

TL;DR: In this article, a series of workshops comprising a range of Australian tourism stakeholders explores the way in which these key drivers could affect the global tourism industry to the year 2020, and innovative strategies can be formulated by destination managers and tourism operators to avoid strategic drift for their organizations and to develop tourism in a sustainable way.
Book

Network Analysis and Tourism: From Theory to Practice

TL;DR: Noel Scott et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a case study of the Chinese Inbound travel trade to Australia and showed that the benefits of networks to small and medium-sized tourism enterprises can be seen from a social network perspective.
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Network science: A Review Focused on Tourism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the methods of the science of networks with an application to the field of tourism studies and present a case study (Elba, Italy) used to illustrate the effect of network typology on information diffusion.
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Muslim world and its tourisms

TL;DR: The study of tourism in the Muslim world can be about religious topics such as hajj and pilgrimage, but it actually means and involves much more as discussed by the authors, because religious life and secular life in Islam are closely intertwined, study of its tourism is also partly about its worldview and culture as well as reflecting on Western concepts of travel and hedonistic tourism.
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Destination networks: Four Australian cases

TL;DR: In this paper, the structural properties of interorganizational networks within destinations are examined and four Australian case studies demonstrate the utility of network analysis by illustrating features such as product clusters, structural divides, and central organizations.