Looking at Arctic tourism through the lens of cultural sensitivity:ARCTISEN – a transnational baseline report
The Culturally Sensitive Tourism in the Arctic — ARCTISEN — project involves transnational cooperation between project partners from Canada, Denmark, Finland, Greenland, New Zealand, Norway, and Sweden. The aim of the project is to introduce sensitivity as a core concept for an improved entrepreneur...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Lapland
2019
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/3e58fe92-3350-413e-a4c6-ac3894ea08d2 https://vbn.aau.dk/ws/files/317723319/Arctisen_a_transnational_baseline_report.pdf https://lauda.ulapland.fi/bitstream/handle/10024/64069/Arctisen%20-%20a%20transnational%20baseline%20report.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |
Summary: | The Culturally Sensitive Tourism in the Arctic — ARCTISEN — project involves transnational cooperation between project partners from Canada, Denmark, Finland, Greenland, New Zealand, Norway, and Sweden. The aim of the project is to introduce sensitivity as a core concept for an improved entrepreneurial business environment. Embracing the notion of sensitivity highlights the negative experiences of cultural exploitation and ensures that Indigenous peoples and other local communities control and determine how their cultures (i.e., what practices, ceremonies, and customs) are used in tourism. The project is a contribution to inclusive and responsible tourism development with the aim of encouraging tourism entrepreneurship among previously underrepresented or misrepresented groups. The project will raise awareness related to, for instance, the sensitive use of cultural symbols and traditional livelihoods in tourism development together with culturally sensitive product development. By doing this, the project will create better opportunities for Indigenous and other local tourism entrepreneurs in the Arctic regions to utilize both their cultural heritage and contemporary and everyday lives in creating successful tourism products and services. The main result of the project will be achieved by improving and increasing transnational contacts, networks, and cooperation among different businesses and organizations. This report includes systematized information and built knowledge of the current practices of utilizing Indigenous and other local cultures in tourism in the project area. The project partners have interviewed start-ups, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), local destination management organizations (DMO), and other tourism actors about their business environments, product development, and capacity-building needs. In total, the partners conducted 44 interviews in Finland, 13 in Greenland, 23 in Norway, and 18 in Sweden. The focus of the interviews lied in questions of agency and self-determination, but ... |
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