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Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Exper...
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Subandi, Mohamad Robbith.
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Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Experiences from Indonesia.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Experiences from Indonesia./
作者:
Subandi, Mohamad Robbith.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2023,
面頁冊數:
150 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-11, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International85-11B.
標題:
Infections. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=31005505
ISBN:
9798382626840
Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Experiences from Indonesia.
Subandi, Mohamad Robbith.
Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Experiences from Indonesia.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2023 - 150 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-11, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Wageningen University and Research, 2023.
Tourism is a fragile sector; it is prone to uncertainty. Th e recent COVID-19 pandemic reaffi rmed this vulnerability. Th e pandemic had an unprecedented impact that brought the global tourism industry to a standstill. In this thesis I examined how the Indonesian government in 2020-2022 has addressed the pandemic. First, I investigated how various Indonesian tourism stakeholders responded to this COVID-19 pandemic discursively and how the impacts of this pandemic and the subsequent mitigation and recovery ideas were discussed and debated, which gave rise to certain dominant narratives overlooking others. Second, I examined to what extent these discourses were translated and manifested in actual mitigation and recovery policies of Indonesian tourism development during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. Th ird, I also looked at how these policies infl uenced tourism practices on the ground during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially in the experience value co-creation process between host and tourist in Belitung.Th e main research question of this research is:"How has the COVID-19 pandemic infl uenced tourism policies and development in Indonesia?"To address this research question a qualitative approach combined discursive analysis techniques and a case study. Th e discursive analysis involved the examination of tourism webinars, newspaper articles and Indonesian tourism development and mitigation policy documents, which were used in this thesis's fi rst and second chapters. In the third Chapter, I employed a case study which involved in-depth interviews with tourists and hosts and participant observations of a small group of tourists visiting a community-based tourism village on the island of Belitung. Th e Belitung case study was used to enrich the data and strengthen the fi ndings on the national-level discourse analysis.In this thesis I employed a critical lens that focuses on power relations to understand and analyze the phenomenon under study. By adopting this critical perspective, I aimed to explore hidden power structures, inequalities, and their implications. By incorporating a critical power analysis, I anticipated to unravel how COVID-19 mitigation strategies and the responses from stakeholders are infl uenced and determined by the existing structure of power and the competing interests of the parties involved.In Chapter 2 I investigated the early period of the pandemic. Between March and September 2020, the national debate in Indonesia (including the government, tourism businesses and academics) gradually saw the emergence of several competing discourses and narratives focused on short-term recovery of tourism, as well as potential long-term future developments. The notion of the 'New Normal' clearly emerged as an overarching discourse that framed the debate throughout the period, with the notion of sustainable tourism gradually moving to the foreground as we entered the second half of 2020. Under the heading of the 'New Normal', three prominent issues prevailed: social distancing, health and hygiene protocols, and 'quality tourism'. Despite the growing significance of the notion of sustainability in the Indonesian tourism discourse, the interpretations and implementation of the concept itself remained indistinct and limited. As discourses will change as circumstances change, a continued monitoring of the discourse on tourism development and its implementation is needed to assess whether the envisioned sustainability improvements will materialize or remain rhetorical.Chapter 3 is a continuation of the first empirical chapter by examining the Indonesian COVID-19 tourism mitigation efforts and their short-term and long-term impacts on the Indonesian tourism development, specifically the plans focusing on the 10 New Bali project.
ISBN: 9798382626840Subjects--Topical Terms:
1621997
Infections.
Tourism and Covid-19 Pandemic: Experiences from Indonesia.
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Tourism is a fragile sector; it is prone to uncertainty. Th e recent COVID-19 pandemic reaffi rmed this vulnerability. Th e pandemic had an unprecedented impact that brought the global tourism industry to a standstill. In this thesis I examined how the Indonesian government in 2020-2022 has addressed the pandemic. First, I investigated how various Indonesian tourism stakeholders responded to this COVID-19 pandemic discursively and how the impacts of this pandemic and the subsequent mitigation and recovery ideas were discussed and debated, which gave rise to certain dominant narratives overlooking others. Second, I examined to what extent these discourses were translated and manifested in actual mitigation and recovery policies of Indonesian tourism development during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. Th ird, I also looked at how these policies infl uenced tourism practices on the ground during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially in the experience value co-creation process between host and tourist in Belitung.Th e main research question of this research is:"How has the COVID-19 pandemic infl uenced tourism policies and development in Indonesia?"To address this research question a qualitative approach combined discursive analysis techniques and a case study. Th e discursive analysis involved the examination of tourism webinars, newspaper articles and Indonesian tourism development and mitigation policy documents, which were used in this thesis's fi rst and second chapters. In the third Chapter, I employed a case study which involved in-depth interviews with tourists and hosts and participant observations of a small group of tourists visiting a community-based tourism village on the island of Belitung. Th e Belitung case study was used to enrich the data and strengthen the fi ndings on the national-level discourse analysis.In this thesis I employed a critical lens that focuses on power relations to understand and analyze the phenomenon under study. By adopting this critical perspective, I aimed to explore hidden power structures, inequalities, and their implications. By incorporating a critical power analysis, I anticipated to unravel how COVID-19 mitigation strategies and the responses from stakeholders are infl uenced and determined by the existing structure of power and the competing interests of the parties involved.In Chapter 2 I investigated the early period of the pandemic. Between March and September 2020, the national debate in Indonesia (including the government, tourism businesses and academics) gradually saw the emergence of several competing discourses and narratives focused on short-term recovery of tourism, as well as potential long-term future developments. The notion of the 'New Normal' clearly emerged as an overarching discourse that framed the debate throughout the period, with the notion of sustainable tourism gradually moving to the foreground as we entered the second half of 2020. Under the heading of the 'New Normal', three prominent issues prevailed: social distancing, health and hygiene protocols, and 'quality tourism'. Despite the growing significance of the notion of sustainability in the Indonesian tourism discourse, the interpretations and implementation of the concept itself remained indistinct and limited. As discourses will change as circumstances change, a continued monitoring of the discourse on tourism development and its implementation is needed to assess whether the envisioned sustainability improvements will materialize or remain rhetorical.Chapter 3 is a continuation of the first empirical chapter by examining the Indonesian COVID-19 tourism mitigation efforts and their short-term and long-term impacts on the Indonesian tourism development, specifically the plans focusing on the 10 New Bali project.
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