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When Storms Strike: Performing Tourism, Hurricanes, and a Pandemic in Accumulation and Dispossession

Ian Bethell-Bennett (University of The Bahamas, The Bahamas)

Pandemics, Disasters, Sustainability, Tourism

ISBN: 978-1-80382-106-1, eISBN: 978-1-80382-105-4

Publication date: 4 August 2022

Abstract

The chapter explores how tourism creates even more dependence as spaces become gentrified and too expensive for local occupation through colonial tropes, and accumulation models. Tourism consumes gently. In the wake of Hurricanes Irma, Maria, and Dorian, The Bahamas and Puerto Rico have experienced an accelerated strike on their natural and social resources: from land deals and tax concessions to power infrastructure and school closures. Debt has plagued the countries; the policies designed to get them out of debt prior to the natural disasters, then converted into man-made disasters, have only deepened dependence and indebtedness. In fact, both have become externalized communities where land is being accumulated through dispossession. Tourism is more than just hotels and resorts; it is now the gated communities and private islands that build on coloniality and inequalities. Tourism, disaster capitalism, and green grabbing accumulate by dispossessing locals of land in the name of improving their economic health. Economic well being seems to result in loss.

Keywords

Citation

Bethell-Bennett, I. (2022), "When Storms Strike: Performing Tourism, Hurricanes, and a Pandemic in Accumulation and Dispossession", Bethell-Bennett, I., Rolle, S.A., Minnis, J. and Okumus, F. (Ed.) Pandemics, Disasters, Sustainability, Tourism, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 193-210. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80382-105-420221013

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Ian Bethell-Bennett Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited