Abstract

In Native Tours, Erve Chambers (2000) challenged anthropologists to move beyond studying local peoples ("hosts") as "passive recipients of a touristic dynamic." This issue of Practicing Anthropology builds on three sessions I organized for the 2004 and 2005 SfAA annual meetings, in which contributing anthropologists shared aspects of their collaborative work with local peoples. These partners were actively involved in considering, debating, exploring, and guiding tourism development in small towns, rural regions, and hamlets in the United States, Africa, Mexico, Nepal, and Ireland.

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