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1

Associates, Nicholas Clark and. Tonga national tourism plan. Nuku'alofa: Nicholas Clark and Associates, 1993.

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2

National Tourism Office of Vanuatu. National Tourism Office of Vanuatu: Business plan 2003. [Vanuatu: National Tourism Office of Vanuatu, 2002.

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3

(Firm), Euro Asia Management. National tourism development master plan: Draft final report. [Jakarta]: Euro Asia Management, 1998.

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4

Nepal. Dept. of National Parks & Wildlife Conservation. Sagarmatha National Park management and tourism plan, 2007-2012. Kathmandu]: Ministry of Forests and Soil Conservation, Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, 2006.

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5

Authority, Marshall Islands Visitors. Republic of the Marshall Islands national tourism development plan, 2008-2011: Ewamourur im loti la : success and sustainability. Majuro, Marshall Islands]: Marshall Islands Visitors Authority, 2007.

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6

Tourism, Australia Office of National. Tourism: A ticket to the 21st century : national action plan for a competitive Australia. Canberra: Office of National Tourism, 1998.

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7

Heath, Angela. Establishing a new national body for tourism in England: Report and action plan submitted to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. London?]: The Dept., 1999.

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8

Shrestha, Tirtha Bahadur. Sagaramāthā Rāshṭriya Nikuñja vyavasthāpana tathā paryaṭana yojanā =: Sagarmatha National Park management and tourism plan, 2064-2069 (2007-2012). Kathmandu]: Āī. Yū. Sī. Ena.--Antarrāshṭriya Prakr̥ti Saṃrakshaṇa Saṅgha, 2009.

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9

Management, United States Bureau of Land. National mountain bicycling strategic action plan: Draft. Washington, D.C: United States, Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, 2002.

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10

Carter, Judy. Tourism master plans for national parks and game reserves in Malawi. Lilongwe, Malawi: Government of Malawi, Dept. of National Parks and Wildlife, 1985.

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11

Cunnew, K. A. An evaluation of PPG 21: the incorporation of national guidance for tourism into local plans. Oxford: Oxford Brookes University, 1997.

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12

Tourist Resort Development (Conference) (1985 Artarmon, N.S.W.). Tourism Resort Development: Markets, plans and impacts : national conference : November 25th-28th 1985, Sydney : proceedings. [Lindfield, N.S.W.]: Centre for Leisure and Tourism Studies, Kuring-gai College of Advanced Education, 1986.

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13

Pelletier, Monique. Tours et contours de la terre: Itinéraires d'une femme au cœur de la cartographie. Paris: Presses de l'Ecole nationale des ponts et chaussées, 1999.

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14

India. Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism. National action plan for tourism. The Ministry, 1992.

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15

Sheppard, Sarah. Kibale National Park: Tourism Development Plan : final report. [s.n.], 1996.

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16

Program, WWF Nepal, and Nepal. Dept. of National Parks & Wildlife Conservation., eds. Royal Bardia National Park and buffer zone: Tourism plan, 2001-2006. Kathmandu: WWF Nepal Program, 2002.

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17

Rice, Mark. Making Machu Picchu. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469643533.001.0001.

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This book examines the transformation of Machu Picchu from an obscure archaeological site into a global tourist destination and national symbol of Peru. This book illustrates how, from the very start, tourism played a central role in the modern rise of Machu Picchu. The leaders of Cusco, where Machu Picchu is located, employed tourism to argue for the importance of their region at a time when Peru’s national leaders believed that the Andean interior offered little cultural and economic opportunities. Over time, Cusco increasingly looked to tourism as a source of needed development at a time of economic crisis in Peru’s southern Andes. While Cusco was successful in making Machu Picchu into a tourist destination, this created new conflicts over control over the region’s culture and economy. In summary, this book highlights how the transnational links and actors associated with tourism allowed local leaders in Cusco and Peru’s southern Andes to create their region’s touristic narrative and economy. Often locals employed the transnational connections of the tourism economy to bypass or influence the policies of the Peruvian national state. Over time, these efforts shifted the Peruvian state to embrace Machu Picchu and Cusco’s Andean culture as national symbols. The book contributes to larger debates about nationalism in Latin America by pointing to the influence of tourism in the elevation of Machu Picchu as a national symbol of Peru. It argues that in post-colonial nations like Peru, transnational forces like tourism can play influential roles in the creation of national identity.
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18

Organization, World Tourism, ed. Marketing plans & strategies of national tourism administrations. Madrid: World Tourism Organization, 1994.

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19

Organization, World Tourism. Budgets and Marketing Plans of National Tourism Administrations (A World Tourism Organization Report). Unipub, 1995.

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20

Ormsby, Robert. Global Cultural Tourism at Canada’s Stratford Festival. Edited by James C. Bulman. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199687169.013.3.

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This chapter examines British director Leon Rubin’s 2003 The Adventures of Pericles at Ontario’s Stratford Festival and analyses its overtly intercultural scenography. The reading is grounded in an analysis of the festival’s vision of itself as a tourist destination that offers a special ‘Stratford experience’. It is argued that the festival’s identity is at once very local and international and the implications of this bifurcated identity are considered through a series of interrelated questions. What is the nature of Rubin’s borrowings from Asian performance traditions, such as Balinese trance rituals? How does the festival portray such borrowings in its publicity material? What kinds of ideas do reviewers circulate about these productions? If, in the early years of the millennium, the festival looked to a British director to purvey ‘Asian’ spectacle to a relatively international audience, what role did Canada, as a nation state, play in sustaining Stratford’s tourist ‘experience’?
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21

Huang, Alexa. Global Shakespeare Criticism Beyond the Nation State. Edited by James C. Bulman. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199687169.013.17.

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This chapter discusses three methodological concerns about studying global Shakespeare—those touring and intercultural performances often thought to play a geopolitical role in cultural diplomacy. First, the postnational space for global arts is shaped by mutual influence and fluid cultural locations rather than by traditional notions of the nation state. It is therefore no longer useful to consider a production within one national context. Second, global Shakespeare as a field of study reflects the anxiety about cultural particularity and universality. Identifying the dynamics behind the production and reception of global Shakespeare will help us confront archival silences in the record of cultural globalization; what has been redacted, eliminated, or suppressed. Third, global citations of Shakespeare—whether in performances or by politicians—demonstrate a spectral quality. The spectre of global Shakespeare is a product of the politically articulated promise and perils of cultural difference.
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22

Gibson, Andrew. ‘At the Dying Atlantic’s Edge’. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198795155.003.0005.

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National mythology, literary criticism, and tourism have long conspired to present Cumbria as an inland space or territory, the ‘Lake District’. However, this imaginary construction excludes another, overlooked version of the region, a coastal strip of bleak and austere beaches, disused mines and foundries, gunneries, and the nuclear plant at Sellafield. Norman Nicholson is the poet par excellence of this very different landscape’s Atlantic edge. Nicholson lived most of his life in the town of Millom on the Duddon Estuary and found in its neglected surroundings a geography of constraint, pinched between the rising fells of the Lakes and the inward push of the ocean. This chapter explores the way such a narrow coastal world finds an almost visionary articulation in Nicholson’s poetry. It draws out the experience of a knife-edge between faith and faithlessness, revealing a mind confronting justice and redemption in poetry with a messianic core.
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23

Holt, Fabian, and Antti-Ville Kärjä, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Popular Music in the Nordic Countries. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190603908.001.0001.

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The Nordic countries, a group of countries spanning a large area of northern Europe and the North Atlantic, present unique natural and cultural environments in which popular music has come to play a significant role. Research on the region’s music has largely followed national narratives and ignored more complex geographies and transcultural issues. This first handbook of music in the Nordic countries explores the significance of popular music in the history of the region, with implications for broader debates about the region’s uniqueness and its future. The chapters highlight music’s place in media and tourism industries, in sustaining exotic images of the North, but also in more serious issues such as racism and environmentalism. Many of the chapters show evidence of nationalist and xenophobic responses to emerging transnational to emerging transnational developments. The handbook examines how these dynamics shape music and its place in history, education, and in public performance, from street performances to festivals, and beyond to mass media ceremonial events. The case studies illustrate popular music’s significance in evolving lifestyles, technologies, and institutions in modernity.
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24

Rocha, Luis E. C., Fredrik Liljeros, and Petter Holme. Sexual and Communication Networks of Internet-Mediated Prostitution. Edited by Scott Cunningham and Manisha Shah. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199915248.013.3.

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This chapter examines prostitution as a socioeconomic phenomenon and discusses its contribution to the spread of sexually transmitted infections. Using online network data from Internet-mediated prostitution in Brazil, it looks at the connectedness of individuals on a review website where clients record intimate details about encounters with sex workers. It begins with an overview of networks, including human sexual networks, along with network properties and measures and the dynamics and structure of a sexual network. It describes general models of disease spreading and introduces a specific methodology for temporal networks, where the infection coevolves with network structure. The chapter shows that the structure of the sexual network is highly clustered within cities but that minimal connections exist across cities. It also finds evidence for local bridges between cities: individual clients who frequent prostitutes nationally. Male tourists play important roles in a potential epidemic by linking otherwise distinct communities.
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