Sessions in which Sarah Frankel participates
domingo 20 junio, 2021
Crafty women: Exploring emotional labor within the craft beer industrybySarah FrankelStefanie BenjaminandCarrie StephensI think a lot of male brewers already know that we as female brewers are already trying to prove ourselves because we already kind of feel as though we weren't really supposed to be at the party … so I'm going to show you why I'm supposed to be here. – ‘Jack’The origins of beer brewing are steeped in thousands of y...
Sessions in which Sarah Frankel attends
sábado 19 junio, 2021
(In French with simultaneous translation)The increase in tourist numbers in certain places that have become "destinations" has recently brought to the forefront the old paradigm of destructive tourism. Here and there, people denounce not only the invasion of living environments and the transformation of urban functions according to tourist expectations, but also the destruction of heritage through the alteration of its authenticity. Such an assertion, based on the original purity of a true...
domingo 20 junio, 2021
CoVid-19 the Intruder: Reflections on Hospitality and JusticebyAya AutruiWhat do tourism and hospitality become through the experience of intrusion? We reflect on this question by entering into a conversation with Jean-Luc Nancy’s (2002) philosophy of the intruder. In “L’Intrus”, Nancy shares his reflections on the difficult experience of his heart transplant, which produces all kinds of unwelcomed strangeness. Nancy teaches us how reflecting on intrusion contributes to novel...
COVID-19 and accessible tourism: A build-back-better opportunitybyGiuseppe AlipertiMaialen SanzBasagaitz Guereño OmilThere has been a growing interest in accessible tourism throughout the years. However, several physical and behavioural barriers are still influencing the development of a fully accessible travel industry. Despite these difficulties, people with disabilities are participating more in tourism even having all kinds of impediments that preven...
Crafty women: Exploring emotional labor within the craft beer industrybySarah FrankelStefanie BenjaminandCarrie StephensI think a lot of male brewers already know that we as female brewers are already trying to prove ourselves because we already kind of feel as though we weren't really supposed to be at the party … so I'm going to show you why I'm supposed to be here. – ‘Jack’The origins of beer brewing are steeped in thousands of y...
lunes 21 junio, 2021
Living in a Black and White world: The value of reflexivity in social equity researchby Alana Dillette and Stefanie BenjaminThough more than fifty years post segregation, the current political landscape in the U.S. suggests that many Americans are still living in a ‘Black and White’ world. Therefore, when two tourism scholars decided to take on the historically White washed tourism industry – it was not smooth sailing. This work uses the meth...
Tourism RESET will be leading a special track: BI-POC issues in tourism, travel, and mobility. Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BI-POC) have endured racial inequalities, segregation and systemic racism for centuries. Globally, travel and tourism has been overpoweringly White-washed, leaving limited room to highlight the experiences and voices of traditionally marginalized groups, the result lending itself ...
Racialized Mobility and Tourism Justice in Jim Crow America: The Negro Motorist Green Book as Archive, Map, and MemorialbyDerek H. Alderman, Ethan Bottone, Joshua InwoodThere is a lengthy history and a continuing legacy of tourism being a site for racialization within the United States (Benjamin and Dillette 2021). Controlling and curtailing the mobility of Black Americans was foundational to the development of a modern, White-dominated American travel industry. These inj...
Confronting the Panopticon: A Case Study of Marketing Activities of Outdoor Nature and Adventure Service Providers in IranbyMahshad Akhoundoghli and Karla A. Boluk The development of a national online social media platform referred to as “Halal net” by the Iranian governmenthas served torestrict access to themany popular instant messaging applications, monitor the sharing of photographs, and communication channels commonly used by outdoor nature and adventure tourism serv...
Quilombola Tourism: The Quest for Recognition, Justice, and Development in the African DiasporabyCarla Guerron MonteroIn December 2013, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed 2015-2024 the International Decade for People of African Descent, with the theme “Recognition, Justice, and Development.” While such proclamations by multilateral organizations are often merely symbolic, this one promotes awareness of the enduring history of resistance to oppression by people...
Ethical and Equitable Tourism DataBy Evita RobinsonThis keynote covers the intersection of data and tourism. In 2020 NOMADNESS Travel Tribe and Tourism RESET had over 5200 respondents to their survey of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) Travelers. The 89-page qualitative and quantitative report methodology is also a case study on how data is more robust when academia and industry work together. The 26,000+ member NOMADNESS community was the bridge to harnessing t...
We are offering time for reflection, processing, and a moment for clarity within a decompression session workshop. These sessions will help folxs make meaning of what they observed and heard in a non-judgmental space. As Probyn (2003) posited, “space informs, limits, and produces subjectivity” and with decompression sessions, conference participants can delineate for themselves the dialogue around race relations and the historical complexities of colonized and White centered narratives. Co...
Diversifying tourism, hospitality and struggles in the politics of urban tourismbyChristopher WilbertFor some decades now, a well established pattern has been in place whereby tourism growth in medium to large cities was seen as a good, requiring minor adjustments to diversify it spatially. European cities, like London, Cambridge, Barcelona, Bergamo have been seeking to divert some tourism beyond the central cultural, shopping and business districts, into wider areas not ...
Travel, Land and Settlerhood: A Collective Memory Work Studyby Kendra E. FortinChris HurstandBryan S.R. GrimwoodTourism experiences, memories and narratives are inscribed with meanings of land and identity. Activities often associated with Canadian summers, such as camping and cottaging, convey a façade of simplistic living. However, these pursuits are made possible through the historical and ongoing displacement of Indigenous peoples and the a...
Priviledging indigenous voices: A participatory oriented approachbyXiaotao YangandHeather MairIn 2012, Peters andHiggins-Desbiolles, wrote “What is wholly absent [from the tourism literature] …is any recognition of Indigenous peoples as tourists”(p.78).Chambers and Buzinde (2015) acknowledged that “tourism knowledge is still predominantly colonial” (p.1) because Eurocentric epistemologies are still privileged and people from the South continue to be research...
martes 22 junio, 2021
Wall, Pine and SeabyAdam DoeringandAna Maria MunarThe theme of this conference is Tourism Justice. Ours is also a story of justice, but the kind where reconciliation, restoration, or redistributive justice may no longer be plausible. A justice where time cannot be reversed or catastrophe erased, but where holding open possibilities of beauty in ruins and hearing stories of partial recuperation may offer a new sensibility for other forms of just beginnings to...
Exploring Literary Narratives as Place-making Agency: Acknowledging Under-represented Voices in Carribean Tourism DevelopmentbyKelley A. McClinchey Sa key tan parlay lute1(Who hear tell the others)Critical scholars adopt postcolonial frameworks to problematize the cultural, environmental and political encounters of tourism prioritizing voices from the south to counteract a ‘western’ privileged context (Caton & Santos, 2009; E...
Art inside out's residency "other choreographies, new spaces" based on the concept of critical tourismbyPetra Johansson & Cecilia Gelin We are all tourists. Our desire to escape daily life and reality leads us to seek out unfamiliar places and situations. Issues such as threats to the climate, immigration and the pandemic, are now affecting the way we move and travel. New contexts and overlooked stories and details create other relationsh...