Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data
The authors of this paper attempted to develop a database that would serve to track social changes brought about by the expansion of arctic tourism resulting from climate change. In this paper we review and assess the state of data used to describe and monitor tourism trends in the pan-arctic and th...
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ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/14624 2023-11-05T03:38:17+01:00 Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data Fay, Ginny Karlsdottir, Anna 2011-03-01 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14624 en_US eng Institute of Social and Economic Research Polar Geography, Vol. 34, June 2011, pp. 63-86 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14624 Polar Geography Tourism Climate Change Impact Alaska Article 2011 ftunivalaska 2023-10-12T18:03:17Z The authors of this paper attempted to develop a database that would serve to track social changes brought about by the expansion of arctic tourism resulting from climate change. In this paper we review and assess the state of data used to describe and monitor tourism trends in the pan-arctic and their potential social effects. We selected 12 potential indicators for long-term assessment and monitoring changes in arctic tourism. We attempted to collect consistent data from 1980 to 2008 for Alaska, Canada, Norway, Greenland, Lapland and Iceland. In addition to visitor counts of various types, the database includes tourism-related employment and earnings at the place and regional levels, though the data are not consistent or complete for all the countries. The World Tourism Organization provides relatively standardized tourism data definitions. However, data collection by national agencies varies across the arctic countries and data are not available for all selected indicators. A significant problem is that most jurisdictions use sampling and reporting protocols that result in statistically unreliable estimates for remote rural areas. These same areas may also be most vulnerable to potential impacts and changes brought about by expanding tourism development. We discuss the critical need for an arctic tourism observation system. Standardization or comparability of time series data sets will be important for the future monitoring and modeling of changes in the arctic environment and associated impacts of expanding tourism, especially as diminishing sea ice cover increases visitor access. Yes Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Greenland Iceland Polar Geography Sea ice Alaska Lapland University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA |
op_collection_id |
ftunivalaska |
language |
English |
topic |
Tourism Climate Change Impact Alaska |
spellingShingle |
Tourism Climate Change Impact Alaska Fay, Ginny Karlsdottir, Anna Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
topic_facet |
Tourism Climate Change Impact Alaska |
description |
The authors of this paper attempted to develop a database that would serve to track social changes brought about by the expansion of arctic tourism resulting from climate change. In this paper we review and assess the state of data used to describe and monitor tourism trends in the pan-arctic and their potential social effects. We selected 12 potential indicators for long-term assessment and monitoring changes in arctic tourism. We attempted to collect consistent data from 1980 to 2008 for Alaska, Canada, Norway, Greenland, Lapland and Iceland. In addition to visitor counts of various types, the database includes tourism-related employment and earnings at the place and regional levels, though the data are not consistent or complete for all the countries. The World Tourism Organization provides relatively standardized tourism data definitions. However, data collection by national agencies varies across the arctic countries and data are not available for all selected indicators. A significant problem is that most jurisdictions use sampling and reporting protocols that result in statistically unreliable estimates for remote rural areas. These same areas may also be most vulnerable to potential impacts and changes brought about by expanding tourism development. We discuss the critical need for an arctic tourism observation system. Standardization or comparability of time series data sets will be important for the future monitoring and modeling of changes in the arctic environment and associated impacts of expanding tourism, especially as diminishing sea ice cover increases visitor access. Yes |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Fay, Ginny Karlsdottir, Anna |
author_facet |
Fay, Ginny Karlsdottir, Anna |
author_sort |
Fay, Ginny |
title |
Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
title_short |
Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
title_full |
Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
title_fullStr |
Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
title_full_unstemmed |
Social Indicators for Arctic Tourism: Observing Trends and Assessing Data |
title_sort |
social indicators for arctic tourism: observing trends and assessing data |
publisher |
Institute of Social and Economic Research |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14624 |
genre |
Arctic Climate change Greenland Iceland Polar Geography Sea ice Alaska Lapland |
genre_facet |
Arctic Climate change Greenland Iceland Polar Geography Sea ice Alaska Lapland |
op_relation |
Polar Geography, Vol. 34, June 2011, pp. 63-86 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/14624 Polar Geography |
_version_ |
1781693970955370496 |