Sökning: "tourism protected areas"
Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 11 avhandlingar innehållade orden tourism protected areas.
1. Protected Attractions : Tourism and Wilderness in the Swedish Mountain Region
Sammanfattning : Europe's first national parks were established in northern Sweden in 1909 and this region has thus functioned as a protected and aesthetic pleasure landscape for a century. In 1996, due to the combination of spectacular natural environment and ancient Sami traditions the Laponian World Heritage Area was established here. LÄS MER
2. Tourism Development in Peripheral Areas : Processes of Local Innovation and Change in Northern Sweden
Sammanfattning : Tourism has reached almost all regions of the world and has had a notable growth in the peripheral regions of Europe. Attempts at tourism development in rural and peripheral areas have resulted in widely varying outcomes and have often been undertaken as a last resort by communities. LÄS MER
3. Tourism attractions and land use interactions : Case studies from protected areas in the Swedish mountain region
Sammanfattning : .... LÄS MER
4. Effects of community- and government-managed marine protected areas on tropical seagrass and coral communities
Sammanfattning : Tropical seagrass beds and coral reefs are among the most productive and diverse ecosystems on Earth and provide ecosystem services, such as fish production and coastal protection, and support livelihoods of millions of people. At the same time, these ecosystems are threatened globally by anthropogenic disturbances, such as overfishing, pollution and global warming. LÄS MER
5. Tourism Development in Resource Peripheries : conflicting and Unifying Spaces in Northern Sweden
Sammanfattning : The northern Swedish inland is a sparsely populated area with a historical dependence upon natural-resource extraction. Therefore, this region has traditionally been defined as a resource periphery for extractive purposes. However, the rise of tourism challenges this narrative by producing a pleasure periphery for touristic purposes. LÄS MER