This insightful Handbook explores the relationship between tourism and gentrification, focusing on the post COVID-19 era. It examines the conceptual links between these two social phenomena, outlining the spaces in which tourist gentrification has taken place and its consequences.
Expert authors discuss how the mutually beneficial relationship between tourism and gentrification has expanded in the post-pandemic world. They identify the different spaces where tourist gentrification occurs, such as historic districts, cities and metropolises, as well as analysing specific settings including urban nightlife, red-light districts and commercial areas. Chapters delve into detailed case studies such as the touristification of Lisbon's nightlife, luxury tourism in the Alpine region, and WangHong (digital influencing) gentrification in China. The Handbook emphasises the global nature of tourist gentrification alongside its regional variations and sheds light on positive initiatives to sustainably develop tourism.
Students and scholars of tourism, heritage studies and urban, social and cultural geography will greatly benefit from this timely Handbook. It is also a vital resource for policymakers and practitioners in urban planning and architecture.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'This Handbook undertakes an up-to-date look at the rapidly growing subfield of tourism gentrification which is impacting cities and rural areas globally. Drawing on diverse and interesting examples, it exemplifies the problematic effects and triggers important dialogue on them.' -- Loretta Lees, Initiative on Cities, Boston University, USA 'Maria Gravari-Barbas and Sandra Guinand bring together a set of thoughtful and reflective assessments of tourism gentrification. They establish new directions in the capacity of tourism and hospitality research to comprehend and interpret the broad socio-economic and cultural transformations and disruptions taking place in cities around the world.' -- Kevin Fox Gotham, Tulane University, USA 'This Handbook represents the state-of-the-art corpus to understand in depth the genealogies, manifestations, and possible futures of the processes of dispossession, displacement and reification enmeshed with the production of the tourist city. An essential and exhaustive read for all those who - as scholars, citizens, activists - would like to gain back their right to the city in an era in which the "rights of tourism" seem to meet no substantial contestation in place regimes globally.' -- Antonio Paolo Russo, Rovira i Virgili University, Spain 'An excellent and timely update to the literature on tourism gentrification, this Handbook offers rich theoretical insights and diverse case studies that illuminate how this process is reshaping places across different geographies. A must-read for students, researchers, and anyone interested in the complex interplay between tourism and place transformation.' -- Agustin Cocola-Gant, Rovira i Virgili University, Spain 'This volume provides a thought-provoking discussion of "tourism gentrification", combining fresh conceptual insights with diverse geographical perspectives. The editors have compiled a fascinating set of contributions, resulting in a theoretically and empirically profound analysis that will appeal to both researchers as well as practitioners seeking to address the challenges of tourism-driven urban transformations.' -- Johannes Novy, University of Westminster, UK
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Maße
Höhe: 244 mm
Breite: 169 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0353-2734-8 (9781035327348)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Edited by Maria Gravari-Barbas, Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne University, France and Sandra
Guinand, Institute for Urban and Regional Research, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria
Contents
1 The relationship between gentrification and tourism in a neoliberal, mobile
world: the current situation and future prospects 1
Maria Gravari-Barbas and Sandra Guinand
PART I CONCEPTUAL FRAMING
Part I Introduction - reconsidering tourism gentrification
2 Tourism gentrification: a literature review 22
Sandra Guinand
3 Tourism gentrification as an extractive and colonial device 40
Giacomo-Maria Salerno
4 Tourist alienation: spatial alienation in gentrification and touristification
studies 56
Iban Diaz-Parra
5 Capturing tourism gentrification-induced displacement in Reykjavik:
land-use changes and stories of those displaced 71
Anne-Cecile Mermet
6 Gentrification and deconcentration of tourist flows in European cities:
paradoxes of counterproductive solutions 88
Agnieszka Niezgoda and Michal Zemla
7 A theoretical debate on gentrification and touristification: drawbacks,
limitations and ambivalences 103
Jorge Sequera
PART II PLACES
Part II Introduction - places of tourism gentrification expressions
8 Tourism, urban policies and commercial gentrification: An outlook from
Lisbon 120
Pedro Guimaraes
9 Producing spaces for aspiration in Hamburg, Germany: post-political
governance, business improvement districts and tourism gentrification 140
Susanna F. Schaller
10 Overtourism and gentrification in the eastern Mediterranean coastal cities:
the need for a sustainable and integrated approach in World Heritage sites 156
Snezana Bobic and Mina Akhavan
11 Regenerating Khedival Cairo: tourism gentrification in the nexus of stateled regeneration and real estate entrepreneurship 182
Maria Gravari-Barbas and Lamia Zied Abudief
12 Urban transformation in the Chueca neighbourhood (Madrid): from
deterioration to gay gentrification and touristification 200
Maria Garcia-Hernandez, Manuel de la Calle-Vaquero and Carmen Minguez
13 Moving to the tourist city: new residents' perspectives on tourism and
quality of life in Venice's historical centre 221
Emanuele Giordano
14 Tourism-led gentrification in urban Africa: a perspective from Southern
Africa 235
Gustav Visser and Anele Horn
15 Power dynamics and negotiated space: analysis of multiple trajectories
of tourism gentrification in the Guangzhou-Foshan urban agglomeration,
China 248
Liang Liang
16 Tourism gentrification as a factor in urban fragmentation and inequality in
Palma (Majorca, Spain) 266
Jesus M. Gonzalez-Perez
PART III FEATURES
Part III Introduction - tourism gentrification's variegated features
17 WangHong gentrification in China: the social media transformation of
Tianjin's former concessions 295
Chensi Shen
18 Re enchanting the walkable city: controversies and turmoil in Athens's
public space 321
Dimitra Kanellopoulou
19 Yard by yard, life is (not) hard: tourism gentrification and the extension of
the pedestrian zone in old town Belgrade 342
Milos Nicic
20 The mayor, the super-rich and the "reinvention" of Paris: towards a
transectoral analysis of Paris gentrification 361
Maria Gravari-Barbas
21 Luxury tourism and Alpine gentrification in the wake of the COVID-19
pandemic 384
Magda Bolzoni, Giovanni Semi and Marta Tonetta
22 Transforming Pigalle: the gentrified evolution of the Paris red-light district 401
Allison Blythe Strickland and Maria Gravari-Barbas
23 Commercial and cultural gentrification in urban context: the case of
Kadikoey in Istanbul 425
Ece Arslan
24 The touristification of Lisbon's nightlife: impacts on the tangible and the
intangible cultural heritage 446
Jordi Nofre, Manuel Garcia-Ruiz, Joao Carlos Martins and Guilherme
Teixeira Costa
25 Counter-narratives of gentrification: equity-based placemaking and
cultural district planning in Little Jamaica, Toronto, Canada 464
Kelley A. McClinchey