Journal article
Developing resilience for small island tourism planning: A qualitative design infusing the sustainability trilogy with three streams of resilience thinking
Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, Vol.11(1), pp.1-30
30/06/2022
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Abstract
Overlooked connections between sustainable development goals (SDG) and principles of resilience (POR) drive this case study through theoretical ‘Streams of Resilience’ thinking to expose disjuncts in gastronomy, tourism, and domestic development policy on Ly Son Island Vietnam. Grounded approach qualitative methodology supports critique of tourism developments filtered through sustainability-impact trilogy dimensions. Findings suggest that socio-economic and natural ecosystem ‘slow accumulation impacts’ result from internal and external geo-political forces. The critical carrying capacity issues for Ly Son are compounded: first by the internal success of garlic-based agritourism development; and second, Vietnam’s desire to increase ‘on-Island’, investment in tourism infrastructure as a sovereignty response to external influences in a disputed Eastern Sea. Global mobility dilemmas trigger island community and national dialogues that must go beyond sustainable livelihoods to ‘all-around’ resilient ecosystems.
Details
- Title
- Developing resilience for small island tourism planning: A qualitative design infusing the sustainability trilogy with three streams of resilience thinking
- Creators
- Rodney William Caldicott - Southern Cross University, Faculty of Business, Law and ArtsTran Huu Thuy Giang (Author) - Hue University
- Publication Details
- Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, Vol.11(1), pp.1-30
- Publisher
- Institution for Marine and Island Cultures
- Identifiers
- 991013062113502368
- Copyright
- © 2022 Institution for Marine and Island Cultures, Mokpo National University.
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article