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http://hdl.handle.net/10553/51129
Título: | No time for smokescreen skepticism: A rejoinder to Shani and Arad | Autores/as: | Hall, C. Michael Amelung, Bas Cohen, Scott Eijgelaar, Eke Gössling, Stefan Higham, James Leemans, Rik Peeters, Paul Ram, Yael Scott, Daniel Aall, Carlo Abegg, Bruno Araña, Jorge E. Barr, Stewart Becken, Susanne Buckley, Ralf Burns, Peter Coles, Tim Dawson, Jackie Doran, Rouven Dubois, Ghislain Duval, David Timothy Fennell, David Gill, Alison M. Gren, Martin Gronau, Werner Guiver, Jo Hopkins, Debbie Huijbens, Edward H. Koens, Ko Lamers, Machiel Lemieux, Christopher Lew, Alan Long, Patrick Melissen, Frans W. Nawijn, Jeroen Nicholls, Sarah Nilsson, Jan Henrik Nunkoo, Robin Pomering, Alan Reis, Arianne C. Reiser, Dirk Richardson, Robert B. Rogerson, Christian M. Saarinen, Jarkko Sæórsdóttir, Anna Dóra Steiger, Robert Upham, Paul van der Linden, Sander Visser, Gustav Wall, Geoffrey Weaver, David |
Palabras clave: | Climate-Change Scientific Consensus Tourism Adaptation Knowledge, et al. |
Fecha de publicación: | 2015 | Editor/a: | 0261-5177 | Publicación seriada: | Tourism Management | Resumen: | Shani and Arad (2014) claimed that tourism scholars tend to endorse the most pessimistic assessments regarding climate change, and that anthropogenic climate change was a "fashionable" and "highly controversial scientific topic". This brief rejoinder provides the balance that is missing from such climate change denial and skepticism studies on climate change and tourism. Recent research provides substantial evidence that reports on anthropogenic climate change are accurate, and that human-induced greenhouse gas emissions, including from the tourism industry, play a significant role in climate change. Some positive net effects may be experienced by some destinations in the short-term, but in the long-term all elements of the tourism system will be impacted. The expansion of tourism emissions at a rate greater than efficiency gains means that it is increasingly urgent that the tourism sector acknowledge, accept and respond to climate change. Debate on tourism-related adaptation and mitigation measures is to be encouraged and welcomed. Climate change denial is not. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/51129 | ISSN: | 0261-5177 | DOI: | 10.1016/j.tourman.2014.08.008 | Fuente: | Tourism Management[ISSN 0261-5177],v. 47, p. 341-347 |
Colección: | Artículos |
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