Journal ArticleDOI
Morality on holiday: inspiring ethical behaviour in animal-based tourism through nonmoral values
Carol Kline,Bob Fischer +1 more
TLDR
Despite the progression of animal welfare within the tourism literature and the industry itself, a significant change in public behaviour remains to be seen as discussed by the authors, despite the acceptance of animals as objects of curiosity.Abstract:
Despite the progression of animal welfare within the tourism literature and the industry itself, a significant change in public behaviour remains to be seen. Anthropocentric views of animals as obj...read more
Citations
More filters
Gazes and Faces in Tourist Photography
TL;DR: In this article, a hermeneutic phenomenological analysis of tourists' accounts of tourist photography is presented, focusing on how encountering the face of the other interrupts the photographer and calls for heightened responsibility and reflection.
Journal ArticleDOI
An animal welfare literacy framework for tourism
TL;DR: In this article , an environmental literacy framework for elephant tourism in Thailand is proposed, i.e., "what an environmentally literate person should know and be able to do, in progressing from animal welfare illiteracy in tourism to literacy".
Journal ArticleDOI
Ethics support through rapport: Elaborating the impact of service provider rapport on ethical behaviour intention of the tourists
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that service provider rapport induces happiness that broadens moral cognition and builds personal resources to perform ethical behaviour, and that happiness also elevates tourist's moral identity centrality, leading to ethical judgment and ethical behaviour intention.
Journal ArticleDOI
Making kin and making sense of human-animal relations in tourism
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore how tourism operators make sense of the abilities and needs of working animals during the co-creation of a tourism experience in order to make kin across species.
Journal ArticleDOI
What drives you to the sea? Animal rights, environmental protection and sensation seeking
TL;DR: In this article , a five-stage ordinal logistic model was proposed to assess the relationship between individuals' sensation and risk seeking, concerns about the environment and animal rights, and their interest in engaging in marine recreation during the visit to tourist destinations.
References
More filters
Book
Famine, Affluence, and Morality
TL;DR: The Singer Solution to World Poverty What Should a Billionaire Give - and What Should You? as mentioned in this paper is a book about Peter Singer's solution to world poverty and its relationship with Bill and Melinda Gates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Towards a conceptual framework for wildlife tourism
TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual framework is presented which begins to classify the major components of wildlife tourism/recreation and indicates the roles of and the relationship between these components, and it is suggested the values of conservation, animal welfare, visitor satisfaction, and profitability are often in conflict in wildlife tourism and trade-offs are necessary.
Journal ArticleDOI
The attitude-behaviour gap in sustainable tourism
Emil Juvan,Sara Dolnicar +1 more
TL;DR: This paper investigated why people who actively engage in environmental protection at home engage in vacation behavior which has negative environmental consequences, albeit unintentionally, and found that participants did not report changing their behaviour; instead, they offered a wide range of explanations justifying their tourist activities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tourism: A Critical Business:
TL;DR: In this paper, a research and practice gap is identified demonstrating tourism to be insufficiently critical business, and the limited extent of critical tourism research is established, concluding that tourism should be a critical business and offers pointers for such an agenda.
Journal ArticleDOI
Taking the moral turn in tourism studies
TL;DR: The authors briefly traces the history of moral concerns in tourism studies, indirectly articulated as they have typically been, and then attempts to provide some grounding analysis on why overt talk of such matters has been so difficult to tackle in this domain and why things need to change.