Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart

vii, 45 leaves :ill. 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Otago department: Tourism. "March 2005". The myth and reality of the desolate, ice-bound continent that is Antarctica, has been the subject of fascination and study for over two millennia. This fascination is st...

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Main Author: Grace, Michael Russell Ian
Other Authors: Higham, James, Carr, Anna
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Otago 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2968
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spelling ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/2968 2023-05-15T13:52:08+02:00 Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart Antarctic gateway cities and contemporary mobility. Antarctic gateway cities. Grace, Michael Russell Ian Higham, James Carr, Anna 2012-12-14 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2968 en eng University of Otago http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2968 1006926 All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. Thesis or Dissertation 2012 ftunivotagoour 2022-05-11T19:15:45Z vii, 45 leaves :ill. 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Otago department: Tourism. "March 2005". The myth and reality of the desolate, ice-bound continent that is Antarctica, has been the subject of fascination and study for over two millennia. This fascination is stronger than ever and is no more prevalent than in the fact that more people, scientists and tourists alike, are travelling to the great white continent than ever before. The study of tourism in the Antarctic and its impacts has been the subject of a substantial body of work for more than a decade (Enzenbacher 1991; Headland 1994; Hall & Johnston 1995; Bauer 1994, 2001). Travel to the Antarctic is channelled through a select group of logistics gateways. Despite this intrinsic link between Antarctic travel and the gateways that serve as points of access to the Antarctic, sub-Antarctic and Southern Ocean, the body of literature all but ignores this premise of the importance of these gateways within Antarctica mobility. Subsequently, research into Antarctic gateway cities is conspicuous by its absence, in fact the paper by Hall (2000) stands alone in this field. The purpose of this research sought to fill this void in the literature through taking a multidisciplinary and intermodal perspective, while extending on Hall's (2000) seminal paper; The tourist and economic significance of Antarctic travel in Australian and New Zealand Antarctic gateway cities. This study undertakes a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch (New Zealand) and Hobart (Tasmania, Australia) as socio-technical constructs (Graham 2001a) and is framed around what Urry (2004) describes as the new mobilities paradigm. The research was split into two stages. The first presented an in-depth background into Antarctic travel, the implications of Antarctic law on Antarctic Treaty signatories, and a theoretical and empirical analysis of the contemporary gateway cities. The second stage involved semi-structured interviews with key gateway stakeholders. A total of ten in-depth interviews were conducted between Christchurch and Hobart over a period of six weeks. The results presented a contrasting picture of the Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch and Hobart, in their construction, functions and operations. While both cities are sociotechnical constructions, able to support the logistics of Antarctic mobility, Christchurch was found to be an Antarctic logistics enclave while Hobart, although an Antarctic logistics enclave, was found to operate with greater logistical friction and reduced efficiency compared to Christchurch. The two gateways displayed contrasting networking, tourism operations and promotion and it was concluded that despite simply being Antarctic gateway cities, Christchurch and Hobart are two unique, mutually exclusive constructions. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Southern Ocean University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive) Antarctic Christchurch ENVELOPE(164.167,164.167,-82.467,-82.467) New Zealand Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive)
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language English
description vii, 45 leaves :ill. 30 cm. Includes bibliographical references. University of Otago department: Tourism. "March 2005". The myth and reality of the desolate, ice-bound continent that is Antarctica, has been the subject of fascination and study for over two millennia. This fascination is stronger than ever and is no more prevalent than in the fact that more people, scientists and tourists alike, are travelling to the great white continent than ever before. The study of tourism in the Antarctic and its impacts has been the subject of a substantial body of work for more than a decade (Enzenbacher 1991; Headland 1994; Hall & Johnston 1995; Bauer 1994, 2001). Travel to the Antarctic is channelled through a select group of logistics gateways. Despite this intrinsic link between Antarctic travel and the gateways that serve as points of access to the Antarctic, sub-Antarctic and Southern Ocean, the body of literature all but ignores this premise of the importance of these gateways within Antarctica mobility. Subsequently, research into Antarctic gateway cities is conspicuous by its absence, in fact the paper by Hall (2000) stands alone in this field. The purpose of this research sought to fill this void in the literature through taking a multidisciplinary and intermodal perspective, while extending on Hall's (2000) seminal paper; The tourist and economic significance of Antarctic travel in Australian and New Zealand Antarctic gateway cities. This study undertakes a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch (New Zealand) and Hobart (Tasmania, Australia) as socio-technical constructs (Graham 2001a) and is framed around what Urry (2004) describes as the new mobilities paradigm. The research was split into two stages. The first presented an in-depth background into Antarctic travel, the implications of Antarctic law on Antarctic Treaty signatories, and a theoretical and empirical analysis of the contemporary gateway cities. The second stage involved semi-structured interviews with key gateway stakeholders. A total of ten in-depth interviews were conducted between Christchurch and Hobart over a period of six weeks. The results presented a contrasting picture of the Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch and Hobart, in their construction, functions and operations. While both cities are sociotechnical constructions, able to support the logistics of Antarctic mobility, Christchurch was found to be an Antarctic logistics enclave while Hobart, although an Antarctic logistics enclave, was found to operate with greater logistical friction and reduced efficiency compared to Christchurch. The two gateways displayed contrasting networking, tourism operations and promotion and it was concluded that despite simply being Antarctic gateway cities, Christchurch and Hobart are two unique, mutually exclusive constructions.
author2 Higham, James
Carr, Anna
format Thesis
author Grace, Michael Russell Ian
spellingShingle Grace, Michael Russell Ian
Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
author_facet Grace, Michael Russell Ian
author_sort Grace, Michael Russell Ian
title Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
title_short Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
title_full Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
title_fullStr Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
title_full_unstemmed Antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two Antarctic gateway cities of Christchurch & Hobart
title_sort antarctic gateway cities & contemporary mobility : a comparative analysis of the two antarctic gateway cities of christchurch & hobart
publisher University of Otago
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2968
long_lat ENVELOPE(164.167,164.167,-82.467,-82.467)
geographic Antarctic
Christchurch
New Zealand
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Christchurch
New Zealand
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Southern Ocean
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op_rights All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
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