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Turning points in tourism’s development: 1946-2095, a perspective article

Ian Yeoman (Department of Management, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand)
Una McMahon-Beattie (Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management, Ulster University, Belfast, UK)

Tourism Review

ISSN: 1660-5373

Article publication date: 19 December 2019

Issue publication date: 20 February 2020

383

Abstract

Purpose

This paper sets out to identify when, how and why tourism has changed from 1946 to 2020 using historical and future turning points.

Design/methodology/approach

Using the evolutionary paradigm from future studies and the authors’ expertise, this paper aims to provide a focussed review of the history of tourism to identify turning points drawing upon examples from Tourism Review that have transformed or will be of significance in the evolution of tourism.

Findings

This paper identifies three historical turning points which are mobility, Fordism and mass tourism and a modern-day leisure class. Three future turning points are identified including the political importance of tourism, footprint and transformational technologies.

Originality/value

By undertaking a historical analysis of the tourism literature, we can determine that Hobsbawm’s (1995, p. 46) proposition that “the future is a replication of the past” is true, as many of the debates about tourism from the past are relevant today and will be in the future. Thus, this paper identifies six turning points that are of significance to historians and futurists in understanding the evolution of tourism from 1946 to 2095.

Keywords

Citation

Yeoman, I. and McMahon-Beattie, U. (2020), "Turning points in tourism’s development: 1946-2095, a perspective article", Tourism Review, Vol. 75 No. 1, pp. 86-90. https://doi.org/10.1108/TR-05-2019-0202

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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