Tourism resilience in the context of integrated destination and disaster management (DM<sup>2</sup>)

Authors: Filimonau, V. and De Coteau, D.

Journal: International Journal of Tourism Research

Volume: 22

Issue: 2

Pages: 202-222

eISSN: 1522-1970

ISSN: 1099-2340

DOI: 10.1002/jtr.2329

Abstract:

The disaster management principles should be integrated into the destination management plans to enhance resilience of tourist destinations to natural disasters. The success of such integration depends on the extent of tourism stakeholder collaboration, but this topic remains understudied, especially in the Caribbean. This paper evaluates tourism resilience in Grenada. It finds that local tourism stakeholders are well aware of the potential damage natural disasters can inflict on the destination but fail to develop effective measures to build destination-wide and organizational resilience. The paper proposes an action framework to aid tourism stakeholders in Grenada to more effectively plan for disasters.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/32766/

Source: Scopus

Tourism resilience in the context of integrated destination and disaster management (DM<SUP>2</SUP>)

Authors: Filimonau, V. and De Coteau, D.

Journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TOURISM RESEARCH

Volume: 22

Issue: 2

Pages: 202-222

eISSN: 1522-1970

ISSN: 1099-2340

DOI: 10.1002/jtr.2329

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/32766/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Tourism resilience in the context of integrated destination and disaster management (DM2)

Authors: Filimonau, V. and De Coteau, D.

Journal: International Journal of Tourism Research

Volume: 22

Issue: 2

Pages: 202-222

ISSN: 1099-2340

Abstract:

The disaster management principles should be integrated into the destination management plans to enhance resilience of tourist destinations to natural disasters. The success of such integration depends on the extent of tourism stakeholder collaboration, but this topic remains understudied, especially in the Caribbean. This paper evaluates tourism resilience in Grenada. It finds that local tourism stakeholders are well aware of the potential damage natural disasters can inflict on the destination but fail to develop effective measures to build destination-wide and organizational resilience. The paper proposes an action framework to aid tourism stakeholders in Grenada to more effectively plan for disasters.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/32766/

Source: BURO EPrints