The biopolitics of Artic tourism development and sustainability

In recent years, the concept of Arctification has been used to describe how spatial simplifications and strategic essentialisation of Northern Europe have been used for branding in tourism. This article deconstructs the Arctification phenomenon into three main dimensions, (I) exogenous tourism devel...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Via Tourism Review
Main Author: Aapo Lunden
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:German
English
Spanish
French
Italian
Portuguese
Published: Association Via@ 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4000/viatourism.8084
https://doaj.org/article/94f55f5d37f54b37ba11ad6ab4119ddc
Description
Summary:In recent years, the concept of Arctification has been used to describe how spatial simplifications and strategic essentialisation of Northern Europe have been used for branding in tourism. This article deconstructs the Arctification phenomenon into three main dimensions, (I) exogenous tourism development, (II) territorialisation, and (III) consumptive ethics of planetary care. The article claims, from a biopolitical perspective, that arctified visions of tourism and sustainable tourism in the Arctic can be understood as the production of heterotopic spaces. By engaging with Foucault’s concept of heterotopia as spaces of exception based on deviation (alterity) and compensation (sustainability), the article further claims that it provides a valuable framework for analysing contemporary challenges and paradoxes of sustainability and tourism growth strategies in the Arctic. The article illustrates its main arguments by drawing examples of Arctification from Finnish Lapland.