The book is all about the spaces and places where ecotourism and resource extraction meet, and the challenges, connections and similarities they share. I won't say much more about it here, because you can read the full review free using this link, but I read parts of this on my way to Svalbard in the summer and it was a really good companion in terms of thinking outside the box from the outset.
Just a short post to plug my first journal 'publication': I have written a book review for the Journal of Ecotourism of the excellent collection edited by Bram Büscher and Veronica Davidov: The Ecotourism-Nexus: Political economies and rural realities of (un)comfortable bedfellows.
The book is all about the spaces and places where ecotourism and resource extraction meet, and the challenges, connections and similarities they share. I won't say much more about it here, because you can read the full review free using this link, but I read parts of this on my way to Svalbard in the summer and it was a really good companion in terms of thinking outside the box from the outset.
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I might be in danger of sounding like a broken record, but last month I returned from another great conference and am struck again by the importance of getting out there and presenting my research, but for different reasons. This time, I headed to the very North of Norway for the Barent’s Institute’s "Mining the Arctic: sustainable communities, economies, and governance? Thorvald Stoltenberg Conference. As well as acting as another motivating period of intense analysis and synthesis, I learned a great deal. Given my focus on Svalbard, it was really useful to get a picture of |
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