Abstract

In Slovakia (and former Czechoslovakia), tourism was the subject of a systematic research of more research institutions between 1960 and 1990. These were institutions managed by government departments. Tourism research in Czechoslovakia started in the academic institutions in 1964, when the Department of Tourism and Hospitality was established at Bratislava School of Economics in Slovakia. This department moved to Banská Bystrica in 1973 and became the keystone of the newly established Faculty of Economics of Services and Tourism of the Bratislava School of Economics. After 1990, tourism research in Slovakia was concentrated in the academic institutions, and the number of higher education institutions offering studies in tourism and hotel management increased to seven. Research institutions changed their character, or disappeared in the privatization process. This paper outlines the specialization of tourism research in particular decades from the 1960s in the former Czechoslovakia, and after the splitting of the country into two separate states; it characterizes tourism research and education in Slovakia. Many results have been achieved thanks to the personal commitment and enthusiasm of scientists and teachers, as well as due to the conditions created for scientific research and tourism development by the state. Current tourism research is compared with the past fragmented and uncoordinated situation, which led to the wasting of human and financial resources.

Highlights

  • Czechoslovakia came into existence in 1918, and in 1993 was split into two independent countries: the Slovak Republic and the Czech Republic

  • While thinking about the past and present of tourism research in Czechoslovakia and Slovakia, we have described particular decades of development of research institutions and education in tourism, which started in the territory of the former Czechoslovakia in the 1960s

  • The changes in the socioeconomic and political environment influenced the topics of the research and the institutional basis for tourism research and education

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Summary

Introduction

Czechoslovakia came into existence in 1918, and in 1993 was split into two independent countries: the Slovak Republic and the Czech Republic. A small picturesque country, Slovakia is situated in central Europe. Gúčik (2017) / European Journal of Tourism Research 15, pp. 38-51 frontiers with Austria, the Czech Republic, Poland, Ukraine and Hungary. About 5.4 million inhabitants live on an area of 49.035 km. Slovakia became a member of the EU in 2004, together with other 10 new countries, including the Czech Republic, and in 2009 joined the Euro Zone

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