Abstract

Purpose The aims of this Editorial are twofold: (i) synthesise emergent themes from the special issue (ii) tender four theoretical frameworks toward examination of crises in tourism. Design/methodology/approach The thematic analysis of papers highlights a diversity of COVID-19 related crises contexts and research approaches. The need for robust theoretical interventions is highlighted through the four proposed conceptual frameworks. Findings Crises provides a valuable seam from which to draw new empirical and theoretical insights. Papers in this special issue address the unfolding of crises in tourism and demonstrate how its theorization demands multi and cross-disciplinary entreaties. This special issue is an invitation to examine how global crises in tourism can be more clearly appraised and theorised. The nature of crisis, and the extent to which the global tourism community can continue to adapt remains in question, as dialogues juxtapose the contradictions between tourism growth and tourism sustainability, and between building back better and returning to normal. Originality/value The appraisal of four conceptual frameworks, little used in tourism research provides markers of the theoretical rigour and novelty so often sought. Beck’s risk society reconceptualises risk and the extent to which risk is manmade. Biopolitics refers to the power over the production and reproduction of life itself, where the political stake corresponds to power over society. The political ecology of crisis denaturalises “natural” disasters and their subsequent crises. Justice complements an ethic of care and values like conative empathy to advance social justice and well-being.

Highlights

  • There is little doubt that the COVID-19 pandemic is an exemplar of contemporary crises, unparalleled in its magnitude, bringing global tourism flows to a halt throughout 2020 and well into 2021

  • The intersection between crises and global tourism has been brought into stark relief, emphasizing the way in which vulnerability to exogenous and endogenous shocks leaves j j PAGE 278 JOURNAL OF TOURISM FUTURES VOL. 7 NO. 3 2021, pp. 278-294, Emerald Publishing Limited, ISSN 2055-5911

  • The ripple effects of global crises have rarely left tourism spared and the COVID-19 pandemic joins the long line of crisis events that have constrained the sector

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Summary

Guest editorial

Cheer is based at Wakayama University, Wakayama, Japan; Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand; UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Dominic Lapointe is based at Universitedu Quebec a Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Mary Mostafanezhad is based at University of Hawai’i at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. Tazim Jamal is based at Texas A&M University College Station, College Station, Texas, USA

Paper type Guest editorial
Introduction
On risk society
On the political ecology of crisis
On justice and tourism
Special issue roundup
Conclusion
Further reading
Full Text
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