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Wimdu City Guides: No.2 Barcelona offers detailed advice and insights into Spain’s most popular tourist destination. This free travel guide comprises 11,500 words over 70 pages, covering everything that you need to know when visiting the city - from public transport to Top 10 lists. Plan your next trip to Barcelona with this concise and easy to use eBook, suitable for iPad, tablet, smartphone or desktop viewing. Inside Wimdu City Guides: No.2 Barcelona: 10 focused chapters, offering a structured summary of some of the best historical attractions, cultural sights, restaurants and much more. 60 sights, attractions and points of interest, categorised under relevant headings. Useful tips and essential info - including entrance fees, directions, websites and emergency contacts. 46 full-colour images and maps. Where to stay chapter, featuring the five most popular districts in Barcelona with information about what to expect. Author: Joseph Davey Editors: Claire Williams and Joy Corkery Design and Maps by Joanna Zamojta Art Direction by Cassie Zhen About Wimdu: As Europe’s leading online platform for city apartments, Wimdu offers places to stay for all tastes and budgets. By connecting guests and hosts worldwide, Wimdu offers an enjoyable, authentic travel experience for those looking for a smart alternative to hotels. From penthouse apartments in New York to cosy studios in Paris, Wimdu’s range of over 300,000 properties in more than 150 countries ensures that everybody can find attractive, affordable accommodation for their next trip. www.wimdu.co.uk
Wimdu City Guides: No.3 Rome offers detailed advice and insights into Italy’s iconic capital. Divided into 10 easy-to-digest chapters, comprising 11,000 words over 75 pages, this free and accessible guide offers a tantalising taste of the history and culture of this unique city, while also providing all of the need-to-know information. Discover Rome and plan your next trip with our concise and informative eBook, suitable for iPad, tablet, smartphone and desktop viewing. Inside Wimdu City Guides: No.2 Barcelona: 65 sights, attractions and points of interest, categorised and detailed under relevant headings. 10 tantalising chapters, presenting a structured summary of the city’s most significant historical attractions, cultural sights, restaurants and more. Useful tips and essential info, so that you’re never caught off guard. Everything including entrance fees, directions, websites and emergency contacts are at your fingertips. 53 full-colour images and maps. A ‘Where to Stay’ chapter, outlining five of Rome’s most popular districts, and explaining what to expect from each one. Author: Joseph Davey Editors: Claire Williams and Joy Corkery Design and Maps by Joanna Zamojta Art Direction by Cassie Zhen About Wimdu: As Europe’s leading online platform for city apartments, Wimdu offers places to stay for all tastes and budgets. By connecting guests and hosts worldwide, Wimdu offers an enjoyable, authentic travel experience for those looking for a smart alternative to hotels. From penthouse apartments in New York to cosy studios in Paris, Wimdu’s range of over 300,000 properties in more than 150 countries ensures that everybody can find attractive, affordable accommodation for their next trip. www.wimdu.co.uk
The first book to present a new conceptual framework which offers an initial explanation for the continuing and rapid success of such 'disruptive innovators’ and their effects on the international hospitality industry. It discusses all the hot topics in this area, with a specific focus on Airbnb, in the international context.
Controversy shrouds sharing economy platforms. It stems partially from the platforms’ economic impact, which is felt most acutely in certain sectors: Uber drivers compete with taxi drivers; Airbnb hosts compete with hotels. Other consequences lie elsewhere: Uber is associated with a trend toward low-paying, precarious work, whereas Airbnb is accused of exacerbating real estate speculation and raising the cost of long-term rental housing. While governments in some jurisdictions have attempted to rein in the platforms, technology has enabled such companies to bypass conventional regulatory categories, generating accusations of “unfair competition” as well as debates about the merits of existing regulatory regimes. Indeed, the platforms blur a number of familiar distinctions, including personal versus commercial activity; infrastructure versus content; contractual autonomy versus hierarchical control. These ambiguities can stymie legal regimes that rely on these distinctions as organizing principles, including those relating to labour, competition, tax, insurance, information, the prohibition of discrimination, as well as specialized sectoral regulation. This book is organized around five themes: technologies of regulation; regulating technology; the sites of regulation (local to global); regulating markets; and regulating labour. Together, the chapters offer a rich variety of insights on the regulation of the sharing economy, both in terms of the traditional areas of law they bring to bear, and the theoretical perspectives that inform their analysis. Published in English.
This book employs an interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral lens to explore the collaborative dynamics that are currently disrupting, re-creating and transforming the production and consumption of tourism. House swapping, ridesharing, voluntourism, couchsurfing, dinner hosting, social enterprise and similar phenomena are among these collective innovations in tourism that are shaking the very bedrock of an industrial system that has been traditionally sustained along commercial value chains. To date there has been very little investigation of these trends, which have been inspired by, amongst other things, de-industrialization processes and post-capitalist forms of production and consumption, postmaterialism, the rise of the third sector and collaborative governance. Addressing that gap, this book explores the character, depth and breadth of these disruptions, the creative opportunities for tourism that are emerging from them, and how governments are responding to these new challenges. In doing so, the book provides both theoretical and practical insights into the future of tourism in a world that is, paradoxically, becoming both increasingly collaborative and individualized.
The Power of New Urban Tourism explores new forms of tourism in urban areas with their social, political, cultural, architectural and economic implications. By investigating various showcases of New Urban Tourism within its social and spatial frames, the book offers insights into power relations and connections between tourism and cityscapes in various socio-spatial settings around the world. Contributors to the volume show how urban space has become a battleground between local residents and visitors, with changing perceptions of tourists as co-users of public and private urban spaces and as influencers of the local economies. This includes different roles of digital platforms as resources for access to the city and touristic opportunities as well as ways to organise and express protest or shifting representations of urban space. With contemporary cases from a wide disciplinary spectrum, the contributors investigate the power of New Urban Tourism in Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe and Oceania. This focus allows a cross-cultural evaluation of New Urban Tourism and its dynamic, and changing conception transforming and subverting cities and tourism alike. The Power of New Urban Tourism will be of great interest to academics, researchers and students in the fields of cultural studies, sociology, the political sciences, economics, history, human geography, urban design and planning, architecture, ethnology and anthropology.
This book examines key contemporary marketing concepts, issues and challenges that affect destinations within a multidisciplinary global perspective. Uniquely combining both the theoretical and practical approaches, this handbook discusses cutting edge marketing questions such as innovation in destinations, sustainability, social media, peer-to-peer applications and web 3.0. Drawing from the knowledge and expertise of 70 prominent scholars from over 20 countries around the world, The Routledge Handbook of Destination Marketing aims to create an international platform for balanced academic research with practical applications, in order to foster synergetic interaction between academia and industry. For these reasons, it will be a valuable resource for both researchers and practitioners in the field of destination marketing.
The term ‘overtourism’ has come into prominence since 2017 and refers to the fact that, due to various factors such as more sophisticated marketing strategies, a large number of tourists visit the same place at the same time. The consequences are felt by the locals, the tourists themselves as well as the environment. As a result, tourismphobia and anti-tourism movements have emerged as ways for locals to reclaim their lifestyle by refusing to interact with visitors and sometimes discouraging them to visit. This book presents new research on this emerging phenomenon and discusses the main causes and implications before putting forward possible solutions. The authors take an interpretivist approach in order to unveil aspects of overtourism that have not yet been discussed. It provides case studies and explores topics such as tourism education, overtourism of cultural and heritage sites, and the need for sustainable tourism development.
Overtourism has become a major concern for an increasing number of destinations as tourism numbers continue to grow, stimulated by general economic and technological growth and the expansion of the global middle class. This, coupled with relentless promotion of tourism by many organisations and destinations, has increased tourism, despite growing opposition to excessive development. This book is the first academic volume to deal with this topic and contains chapters by experienced researchers in the tourism field, taking a multidisciplinary approach to review and explain the subject. The introductory section begins with an overview of the current situation and the forces enabling the appearance of overtourism. This is followed by a number of case studies from a range of destinations around the world, both urban and rural, which share the same problems. The concluding section includes a discussion of potential mitigation methods and approaches and a final assessment of future developments. The focus and relevance of this book are not just for academics, as it offers insights into destinations, enablers and solutions for how to address the issue of overtourism on a wide variety of scales. This book offers globally relevant perspectives on destinations as varied as Venice and Barcelona, that have gained global media attention, as well as less publicised rural areas and developing destinations.