Urban tourism in the wilderness city Whitehorse, Yukon (Canada)

This case study was originally published as: de la Barre, S. (2020). Urban tourism in the wilderness city Whitehorse, Yukon (Canada). In Müller, D.K., Carson, D.A., de la Barre, S., Granås, B., Jóhannesson, G.T., Øyen, G., Rantala, O., Saarinen, J., Salmela, T., Tervo-Kankare, K., & Welling, J....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: de la Barre, Suzanne
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Nordic Council of Ministers 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6027/temanord2020-529
https://doi.org/10.25316/IR-15448
https://viurrspace.ca/handle/10613/23560
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Summary:This case study was originally published as: de la Barre, S. (2020). Urban tourism in the wilderness city Whitehorse, Yukon (Canada). In Müller, D.K., Carson, D.A., de la Barre, S., Granås, B., Jóhannesson, G.T., Øyen, G., Rantala, O., Saarinen, J., Salmela, T., Tervo-Kankare, K., & Welling, J. Arctic tourism in times of change: Dimensions of urban tourism (pp. 28-40). Nordic Council of Ministers. DOI:10.6027/temanord2020-529 The City of Whitehorse is located in Canada’s northwestern most territory, Yukon, and is a “small city in a big place”. Accordingly, many of its urban characteristics are similar to those of cities found in other circumpolar regions, and it shares many similar roles and functions as a core center located in a periphery that has been, and remains, significantly defined in relation to a vast natural resource extraction region. The following section of this report will examine urban Arctic tourism in relation to the City of Whitehorse. This publication was funded by the Nordic Council of Ministers. Please note that the included reference list is for the entire publication. https://viurrspace.ca/bitstream/handle/10613/23560/delaBarre2020.pdf?sequence=3