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Institution

NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences

EducationBreda, Netherlands
About: NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences is a education organization based out in Breda, Netherlands. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Tourism & Context (language use). The organization has 212 authors who have published 403 publications receiving 8369 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether and when a company's online activities to acquire engaged consumers are beneficial for corporate reputation and found that consumers' intensity of social media use is positively related to their engagement in the airline's social media activities, especially among customers.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction targets postulated by a range of organizations seeking to reduce the consequences of global climate change and how, or if, the global tourism sector can achieve its share of those targets.
Abstract: This review paper examines the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction targets postulated by a range of organizations seeking to reduce the consequences of global climate change and how, or if, the global tourism sector can achieve its share of those targets. It takes both existing estimates of current tourism GHG emissions and emissions projected in a business-as-usual scenario through to 2035 and contrasts them with the “aspirational” emission reduction targets proclaimed by the sector. Analysis reveals that with current high-growth emission trends in tourism, the sector could become a major global source of GHGs in the future if other economic sectors achieve significant emission reductions. Success in achieving emission reductions in tourism is found to be largely dependent on major policy and practice changes in air travel, and stated tourism emission reduction targets do not appear feasible without volumetric changes considering the limited technical emission reduction potential currently projected ...

332 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the concept of resource use intensities (RUIs), which represent tourism's resource needs per unit of consumption (e.g. energy per guest night), and provide an assessment of tourism's global resource use and emissions for the period 1900-2050, utilizing the Peeters Global Tourism Transport Model.
Abstract: This paper pioneers the assessment of tourism's total global resource use, including its fossil fuel consumption, associated CO2 emissions, fresh water, land, and food use. As tourism is a dynamic growth system, characterized by rapidly increasing tourist numbers, understanding its past, current, and future contributions to global resource use is a central requirement for sustainable tourism assessments. The paper introduces the concept of resource use intensities (RUIs), which represent tourism's resource needs per unit of consumption (e.g. energy per guest night). Based on estimates of RUIs, a first assessment of tourism's global resource use and emissions is provided for the period 1900-2050, utilizing the Peeters Global Tourism Transport Model. Results indicate that the current (2010) global tourism system may require c.16,700 PJ of energy, 138 km(3) of fresh water, 62,000 km(2) of land, and 39.4 Mt of food, also causing emissions of 1.12 Gt CO2. Despite efforts to implement more sustainable forms of tourism, analysis indicates that tourism's overall resource consumption may grow by between 92% (water) and 189% (land use) in the period 2010-2050. To maintain the global tourism system consequently requires rapidly growing resource inputs, while the system is simultaneously becoming increasingly vulnerable to disruptions in resource flows.

328 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a 30-year projection and a 45-year simulation of the tourism related CO2 emission caused by global tourism, and compare the value of different ways to approach a (desired) future and give insight into the kind of structural changes required within tourism and tourism transport in case very strong emission reductions are required.

303 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper analyzed the discourses surrounding air travel and identified four major industry discourses: air travel is economically and socially too important to be restricted; fuel use is constantly minimized and new technology will solve the problem; and air travel was treated unfairly in comparison to other travel activities.
Abstract: While a substantial part of the population in Europe seems well informed about the phenomenon of climate change, uncertainty seems to prevail in terms of its seriousness, its consequences for society and action that needs to be taken in order to prevent ‘dangerous interference with the climate system’. Many people seem to believe that there is no scientific consensus about climate change and that individual behavioural change is irrelevant in the face of uncertainty. Such a ‘psychology of denial’ seems particularly strong in the context of air travel, the fastest growing transport sector. This paper seeks to understand this phenomenon by analysing the discourses surrounding air travel. Four major industry discourses are identified: air travel is energy efficient and accounts only for marginal emissions of CO2; air travel is economically and socially too important to be restricted; fuel use is constantly minimized and new technology will solve the problem, and air travel is treated unfairly in comparison t...

253 citations


Authors

Showing all 219 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Greg Richards5028910814
Marcel C. M. Bastiaansen40816280
Paul Peeters371106048
Igor Mayer281002721
John Gelissen27704837
Jeroen Nawijn22501755
Keith Dinnie22692481
Roy C. Wood20761866
Rami K. Isaac1650853
Ondrej Mitas16431060
Eke Eijgelaar1544727
Ko Koens1535937
Harald Warmelink1337769
Marc Stierand1250534
Carlo Perrotta1240652
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202211
202147
202048
201938
201836