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Goa, a beach tourist destination in India, is one of the most preferred tourist destination that has witnessed the pros and cons of tourism.
In this process, the beautiful scenic Goa has become a commercial hub.
Contents of online websites and advertisements by real estate companies operating in Goa suggest that newly developed properties are meant to attract urban elites from Indian metros.
Regardless, the tourism business is simply dependent on tourists – whether they want to come to a resort again or not.
The factor analysis discloses that the factors such as resource exploitation, resource management, socioeconomic empowerment, economic and governance systems, destination empowerment, poverty eradication, and tourism governance, influence the sustainability of tourism in Goa.
For the perceptions and attitudes of the people in Desa Pesinggahan towards the development of the Goa Lawah Temple area to be a spiritual tourism object, it is very appreciative and positive.
This is necessary as a result of more destinations globally offering tourism products, and because marketing, especially via the Internet, has opened up a new world for potential tourists.
The main argument is that it is not music itself, but its material connections to bodies, spacetimes and objects, that enable social differentiation in the multiracial touristic environment of Goa.
In so doing, the paper argues that while Goa has become a dispensable space for the exigencies of contemporary tourist development it has also engendered various forms of resistance to this process.
Our findings can help to enhance the marketing effectiveness of tourism services in general and propose improvements in service features that can increase the attractiveness of Goa in particular.
The findings can be utilized for formulating strategies to attract, maintain and retain more number of Maharashtrian tourists visiting Goa.
Tourism has also significantly changed music culture in Goa.
The article concludes that the development of tourism in Goa has started down an inherently unsustainable route for reasons grounded in the broader context of changes in both global and Indian tourism.
It will also be argued that although the spatiality of the tourism critique points to its heterogeneity, it is precisely because there are multiple constructions of 'Goa' and 'Goan identity' that the discourse constitutes its object, Goa.
As a policy implication, SARIMA model can be used for forecasting tourists demand in India.