Academic literature on the topic 'Tourism – Fiji'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tourism – Fiji"

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Nosa, Vili, and Kitione Veitogavi. "A REVIEW OF MEDICAL TOURISM AND HOW IS IT APPLICABLE TO THE ISLAND OF FIJI." Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal 8, no. 12 (December 19, 2021): 149–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.14738/assrj.812.11366.

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The purpose of this study is to undertake a literature review on the theme of medical tourism. We will use Fiji as a case study. The paper uses a systemic review of secondary data with a comprehensive data extraction methodology to match the subject areas with the specific countries being investigated. This literature review used 61 articles. Most medical tourism cases are driven by a desire for more economical healthcare services than those in most medical tourists' home nations. In order to drive essential improvements, the quality of services encourages investment in technology and facilities in medical tourism-active countries. With increased medical tourism investment and patient numbers, Asian Pacific countries have gained substantial foreign revenue. There are also many questions and uncertainties, despite the many positive aspects of medical tourism, such as the lack of a database to store patient records anywhere in the world or on the ground, growing medical tourism difficulties for local health services, and social and political factors such as corruption, political wars, and government uncertainty, all of which can have a significant impact on a country's medical care. Fiji has begun efforts to develop its medical tourism sector, setting up Oceania Hospital, and investing in Ba and Lautoka hospitals, operated and equipped by the Health Care Fiji brand. However, Fiji requires extensive government support, skilled and qualified personnel, valuable partnerships in its local sector, and infrastructural upgrades to incorporate medical tourism fully.
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Prasad, Navneel Shalendra, and Nikeel Nishkar Kumar. "Resident Perceptions of Environment and Economic Impacts of Tourism in Fiji." Sustainability 14, no. 9 (April 21, 2022): 4989. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su14094989.

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Knowledge of the negative impacts of tourism is an essential prerequisite for sustainability. This study explores the resident perceptions of an educated population on the environment and economic impacts of tourism in Fiji. Using a sample of 298 respondents based on the triple bottom line framework, we construct a model for sustainable tourism planning for Fiji. The structural equation modelling (SEM) approach indicates that awareness of the adverse effects of tourism is vital for the sustainable expansion of the sector and economic development. The current level and type of awareness are nonspecific. The study implies adaptation of sustainability into the education curriculum, enacting uncompromising sustainable acts and policies and forming an independent sustainability national council to vet all tourism developments.
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Soh, Ann-Ni, Chin-Hong Puah, and M. Affendy Arip. "Forecasting Tourism Demand with Composite Indicator Approach for Fiji." Business and Economic Research 9, no. 4 (September 23, 2019): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/ber.v9i4.15502.

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This study attempts to scrutinize the fluctuations of the Fijian tourism market and forecast the early warning signals of tourism market vulnerability using the tourism composite indicator (TCI). The data employed on a monthly basis from 2000M01 to 2017M12 and the indicator construction steps were adopted from the ideology of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). A parsimonious macroeconomic and non-economic fundamental determinant are included for the construction of TCI. Subsequently, the procedure then employed the seasonal adjustment using Census X-12, Christiano-Fitzgerald filtering approach, and Bry-Boschan dating algorithm. Empirical evidence highlighted the signalling attributes against Fijian tourism demand with an average lead time of 2.75 months and around 54 percent of directional accuracy rate, which is significant at 5 percent significance level. Thus, the non-parametric technique can forecast the tourism market outlook and the constructed TCI can provide information content from a macroeconomic perspective for policymakers, tourism market players and investors.
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Greenwood, D. W., and S. Miller. "Property in Fiji." Property Management 4, no. 3 (March 1986): 240–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb006627.

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Naidu, Suwastika, Anand Chand, and Paul Southgate. "Determinants of innovation in the handicraft industry of Fiji and Tonga: an empirical analysis from a tourism perspective." Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global Economy 8, no. 4 (October 7, 2014): 318–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jec-11-2013-0033.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the determinants of innovation in handicraft industry of Fiji and Tonga. Design/methodology/approach – Data for this study was collected via face-to-face interviews with handicraft sellers in Fiji and Tonga. In total, 368 interviews were conducted in Fiji and Tonga out of which, 48 was from Tonga and 320 was from Fiji. Findings – The results of this study show that eight factors; namely, value adding, design uniqueness, new product development, cultural uniqueness, advanced technology, experience of owner, ability of owner to adapt to trends in market and quality of raw materials have significant impact on level of innovation in handicraft industry of Fiji and Tonga. Originality/value – To date, none of the existing studies have examined determinants of innovation in handicraft industry of the Pacific Island countries. This is a pioneering study that examines determinants of innovation in handicraft industry of Fiji and Tonga.
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Pratt, Stephen, Scott McCabe, and Apisalome Movono. "Gross happiness of a 'tourism' village in Fiji." Journal of Destination Marketing & Management 5, no. 1 (March 2016): 26–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdmm.2015.11.001.

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Scheyvens, Regina, and Matt Russell. "Tourism, Land Tenure and Poverty Alleviation in Fiji." Tourism Geographies 14, no. 1 (February 2012): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616688.2011.593188.

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Spennemann, Dirk H. R. "Groundwater, Graves and Golf: Layers of Heritage Tourism on a Fiji Resort Island." Sustainability 13, no. 11 (May 23, 2021): 5863. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13115863.

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While island resorts in the South Pacific are primarily marketed as sun, sea and sand destinations, cultural dimensions value-add to and diversify the product for mixed audiences. Resort developments require, at minimum, the compliance with legally mandated environmental standards and adherence to national employment legislation. Socio-culturally and environmentally sustainable tourism concepts should exceed mandated environmental standards and be characterised by a close involvement with and respect for the expectations of local host communities who may hold land and/or traditional usufruct rights. But do resort developments comply? Using an example of a resort established on free-hold land during the pioneering days of resort development in Fiji, the aim of this paper is to provide a deliberation of the tension between organic resort development and sustainable tourism on private land. It will show that, where cultural and environmental planning controls were absent, development not only could progress unfettered but also that changes to tourism philosophies are not necessarily reflected in changes to a resort. The island of Malolo Lailai (Viti Levu, Fiji) has a rich and multi-layered history and heritage (Fijian, European and Chinese plantations, resort development) that provides an opportunity to value-add to the tourist experience. In reality, however, the ongoing resort development extinguishes past histories in favour of a post-occupation, twentieth-century colonial settler narrative, where heritage sites are merely allowed to co-exist provided they do not impact on resort development objectives. It demonstrates that, in the absence of external regulatory controls, the resort owner’s philosophy dominates and shapes the tourist experience.
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Shestemirov, Alexei A., Olga V. Shinkareva, and Alina A. Kondratenko. "CURRENT PROBLEMS AND CURRENT TRENDS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL TOURISM, TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THE MULTIFACTORIAL IMPACT OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC." Scientific Review. Series 1. Economics and Law, no. 4-5 (2021): 113–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.26653/2076-4650-2021-4-5-09.

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This article is devoted to the study of the state of international tourism in the current epidemiological situation. The study determines the importance of development of the tourism industry in the world, analyzes the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the international tourism industry, and examines the current trends in the sector. It was noted that the regions most vulnerable to changes in the tourism market are Asia and the Pacific (Macau (China), Fiji) and Europe (Spain, Croatia, Montenegro). It was emphasized that the measures taken by many States to support tourism during the pandemic period, such as the introduction of job protection programs, the development of training and retraining schemes aimed at developing new skills important in post-pandemic reality; payments to small and medium-sized enterprises in the tourism industry, their exemption from taxes and fees, etc. It was concluded that the main trends in the tourist market at present are digitalization, individualization of travel, the predominance of local tourism. Priority tasks formulated by the World Tourism Organization are revealed, which should contribute to the restoration of the industry.
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Hughes, Emma, and Regina Scheyvens. "Tourism partnerships: Harnessing tourist compassion to ‘do good’ through community development in Fiji." World Development 145 (September 2021): 105529. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2021.105529.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Tourism – Fiji"

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Fisher, David. "The socio-economic consequences of tourism in Levuka, Fiji." Lincoln University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10182/1284.

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This thesis examines the proposition that the local population at a tourist destination copy the economic behaviour of tourists and learn to give economic value to the same objects and activities that are demonstrated by tourists. Levuka, the old capital of Fiji, served as the case study. It was found that decisions are based on the experiences and the cultural template of which those decisions are a part. There are many acculturating factors involved in the learning process as a subsistance-based economy becomes more monetised. The purchasing habits of tourists have little obvious effect. However, there is evidence that what is of value to tourists and what encourages them to visit the destination are not fully appreciated by many of the host population. Examples of these culturally dissimilar values are externalities such as the physical structures of the built environment and unquantifiable factors such as the ambience of the destination. It is argued that an understanding of the factors that have created cultural rules is necessary if a complete analysis of the effects of tourism is to be undertaken. This can be achieved by considering change as a process and tracing that process by examining the cultural history of the host community. Tourism should be seen as another aspect of change. The response to tourism will then be seen as a new challenge that will be met using the lessons previously learnt and incorporated into the cultural template.
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Tokalau, Filipo, and n/a. "Assessing the willingness to pay in the context of communal land values : the case of backpackers in Fiji." University of Otago. Department of Tourism, 2008. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20080513.121054.

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Communal land values can, on the one hand, be an integral part of the socio-cultural experience which tourists seek and enjoy while visiting Fiji. Partly inherited from the land, such values are still vital as basis of survival in rural Fiji. They are passive so they do not command a price and therefore largely considered free however, indigenous Fijian landowners tend to perceive that such values are an inseparable part of their land and may often expect that these ought to be paid for when land is taken up for development such as in tourism. This dilemma within the tourism system could underpin land conflicts between traditional landowners and tourism entrepreneurs. As tourists ultimately bear costs, the problem can be partially addressed by focusing on their willingness to pay for communal use of land. This research assesses the backpackers� willingness to pay (WTP) for communal values of land in Fiji, including their opinions, feelings, attitudes and perceptions. It uses a social, psychological-economic theoretical framework which postulates firstly, that backpackers will pay in order to maximise satisfaction and, that utilities from passive values can be derived and measured. Secondly, as backpackers search for authenticity, adventure and meeting local people they would tend to be self actualised and therefore willing to pay. A contingent valuation study was undertaken in Fiji from February to June 2003 with a relatively high participation and response rate. Semi-structured interviews were conducted from February to March, 2005 to elicit backpackers� knowledge, feelings, perceptions and attitudes regarding their willingness to pay for the communal use of land. A great majority of respondents were willing to pay. CV respondents were willing to pay an average of F$6.50 for the communal value of land but the younger, highly educated and long haulers would pay less. Though a high proportion of respondents were willing to pay because they valued the communal use of land, for the majority the main reason was financial. Interviewees were willing to pay for economic, psychological and egocentric reasons. The latter two were particularly based on their motivational satisfaction and understanding of the traditional land-based survival skills. Respondents� perceptions of communal values of land, incomes and psychological attitude were also major factors underlying why they were not willing to pay. In light of the study�s findings, it was suggested that the backpacker concept may need to be re-examined as they tended not to be necessarily as budget-minded and exploitative as generally depicted to be. Similarly, they tended to be self-actualising and also espousing motivations similar to those of mass tourists. It was also proposed that WTP can provide a basis for economically analysing the use of passive values of environmental tourism resources, such as land, which can facilitate the industry�s ability in decision making, and management. As an incentive, WTP for communal values of land can be crucial in enhancing and sustaining tourism in a land-scarce economy such as Fiji. In the interim, WTP for communal land use could also provide informed decisions to address current issues such as the Customary Fisheries Bill. Indeed, this pioneering study examines the very issues of passive values for traditionally owned resources which can be applied more broadly; not only in Fiji, but also in other parts of the Pacific.
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Ueleni, Talaivosa. "Ecotourism development in the South Pacific Islands : a sustainable alternative for mass tourism in Fiji Islands /." Electronic version of summary Electronic version of examination, 2004. http://www.wul.waseda.ac.jp/gakui/gaiyo/3947.pdf.

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Qasenivalu, Mosese Tavaga. "The role and impact of services sector on economic growth : an econometric investigation of tourism and air services in Fiji (1968-2006) : a thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Management in Economics at Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand." Massey University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/856.

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Empirical studies have established that tourism is a major determinant of economic growth and that international air services have a beneficial effect on the growth and development of an economy. It has also been argued that trade and public enterprise reforms in the service sectors, undertaken to a greater extent in high income countries, have had a positive impact on the sectors performances. This study analyses several hypotheses relating to Fiji’s tourism and air transport service industries. First the study examines the contribution of tourism exports to economic growth in the case of Fiji. Second, the study analyses whether the tourism reform adopted by Fiji in 1999 under the World Trade Organization’s General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) has impacted on total tourism export performance. Third, the aviation-service growth nexus is investigated. Lastly, the effect of the aviation public enterprise reform activities on the export performance of air services is evaluated. Using time series annual data from 1968 to 2006, the Auto Regressive Distributed Lag. methodology has been utilized to estimate the contribution of each service sector to Fiji’s total service output. The results show that the tourism is a major determinant of growth in Fiji and that the aviation service-growth hypothesis is also valid for Fiji. The empirical results show that both the trade reforms in tourism and the pro-competitive measures undertaken in the airline industry, amongst other determinants, have not significantly created an impact on the respective export performance of tourism and air services. These findings provide key policy implications in the light of capitalizing on services exports as a major source of growth, particularly in developing island countries such as Fiji and the need to facilitate the strengthening of the market to boost the export performance of tourism and air services.
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Young, Nanise J. "The island closest to heaven : Japanese encounters with Fiji." Thesis, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10125/11459.

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Poole, Kathleen. "Tourism and development in Fiji small-scale village-based tourism as a rural development alternative /." 1991. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/25628665.html.

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Kanemasu, Yoko. "From the cannibal isles to the way the world should be a study of ideology, hegemony and resistance /." 2005. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/228504559.html.

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Waqaisavou, Timoci. "Parks, reserves and tourism in Fiji : native landowner attitude and involvement." Thesis, 1997. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/33008/.

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The present study examines the role of native landowners in the operation of Fiji's parks and reserves. It is anticipated that the attitude and level of involvement of native landowners will depend upon the level of economic and/or tourism development that has occured in the particular park and reserve. It is also anticipated that hostility and antagonism towards the park and reserve system will occur in certain areas where the prevailing arrangements are not perceived as delivering tangible benefits or where alternative forms of activity are available to the native landowners.
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Bradly, Andrew Penn. "Sun, sand, and social responsibility : corporate social responsibility in Fiji's tourism industry." Phd thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/151786.

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Rao, Dorasammy R. "Culture and entrepreneurship in Fiji's small tourism business sector." Thesis, 2004. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/341/.

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The roles of culture and entrepreneurial disposition in entrepreneurship have been widely researched. Some researchers have concluded that an individualist culture fosters entrepreneurial disposition and entrepreneurship while a collectivist culture retards them. Others have argued that collectivism does not have much bearing on these two factors. The present research explored entrepreneurship in Fiji's small tourism business sector by focusing on the roles of cultural values and entrepreneurial disposition displayed by the three ethnic groupings. The question of whether successful Fijian entrepreneurship could develop by a fusion of collectivism and entrepreneurial principles was also explored. Ninety-nine respondents from the private, public and semi-public organisations participated in the qualitative survey and a further sixty-two people participated in the quantitative survey. One hundred and twenty-three students took part in the quantitative component of the research. The results of the qualitative data showed that individualism contributed to the entrepreneurial disposition of entrepreneurs belonging to the Indo-Fijian and Others categories, but the quantitative data produced mixed results. Other significant factors that have influenced entrepreneurship amongst these groups include exposure to good educational facilities, risk-taking skills, hard work and perseverance, sound financial management, ability to raise capital, values of materialism and capitalism, prudent business planning, skills of savings and investment, good management skills, and building investment capital. It was found that Fijian entrepreneurship was considerably impeded by collectivism and associated behaviour, and they showed more success in collective capitalism. Other factors that have stifled Fijian entrepreneurship include poor education, lack of hard work and commitment, poor financial management, absence of material culture, inability to raise venture capital, short term planning perspective, and a lack of ability to save funds for future investment. Students from the three ethnic groupings were found to exhibit different degrees of entrepreneurial disposition, but generally displayed similar values of individualism and collectivism. Based on these findings, a reconceptualised model of entrepreneurship was proposed, which shows the interaction of various specifiable contextual variables which influence entrepreneurship.
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Books on the topic "Tourism – Fiji"

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development plan, 2007-2016: Tourism - Fiji's opportunity. [Suva, Fiji]: Sustainable Tourism Development Consortium, 2007.

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development plan, 1998-2005. Suva, Fiji: Ministry of Transport and Tourism, 1997.

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Tourism, Fiji Ministry of. Corporate plan, 2003-2005. Suva, Fiji]: Ministry of Tourism, 2003.

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development action plan, 2007-2009: Tourism - Fiji's opportunity. [Suva, Fiji]: Sustainable Tourism Development Consortium, 2007.

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development plan, 2007-2016: Regional tourism strategy Suncoast. [Suva, Fiji]: Sustainable Tourism Development Consortium, 2007.

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development plan, 2007-2016: Regional tourism strategy Suncoast. [Suva, Fiji]: Sustainable Tourism Development Consortium, 2007.

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Bureau, Fiji Visitors. Fiji Visitors Bureau 2002 marketing plan. Suva, Fiji Islands: Fiji Visitors Bureau, 2001.

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Coopers & Lybrand (Firm). Government of Fiji tourism masterplan: Final report. (s.l.): (Coopers &Lybrand), 1989.

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Coopers & Lybrand (Firm). Government of Fiji tourism masterplan: Final report. (s.l.): (Coopers &Lybrand), 1989.

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Fiji. Ministry of Tourism and Transport. Fiji tourism development plan, 2007-2016: Regional tourism strategy Nadi Corridor. [Suva, Fiji]: Sustainable Tourism Development Consortium, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Tourism – Fiji"

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Pratt, Stephen. "Fiji tourism." In Encyclopedia of Tourism, 1–2. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01669-6_85-2.

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Pratt, Stephen. "Fiji Tourism." In Encyclopedia of Tourism, 1–2. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01669-6_85-3.

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Pratt, Stephen. "Fiji, tourism." In Encyclopedia of Tourism, 1–2. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01669-6_85-1.

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Pratt, Stephen. "Fiji." In Encyclopedia of Tourism, 356–57. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01384-8_85.

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Movono, Apisalome, and Marcus L. Stephenson. "Tourism policy and planning in Fiji." In Routledge Handbook on Tourism and Small Island States in the Pacific, 165–76. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429019968-13.

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Gibson, Dawn, Stephen Pratt, and Apisalome Movono. "14. Tribe Tourism: A Case Study of the Tribewanted Project on Vorovoro, Fiji." In Slow Tourism, edited by Simone Fullagar, Kevin Markwell, and Erica Wilson, 185–200. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845412821-016.

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Jarvis, Jeff, and Victoria Peel. "Chapter 3. Flashpacking in Fiji: Reframing the ‘Global Nomad’ in a Developing Destination." In Beyond Backpacker Tourism, edited by Kevin Hannam and Anya Diekmann, 21–39. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845411329-006.

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Doorne, Stephen, and Irena Ateljevic. "Chapter 8. Tourism Performance as Metaphor: Enacting Backpacker Travel in the Fiji Islands." In Discourse, Communication and Tourism, edited by Adam Jaworski and Annette Pritchard, 173–98. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845410216-011.

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Mafi-Stephens, Marica, Marika Kuilamu, and Alexander Trupp. "Opportunities and challenges of ecotourism development in Fiji." In Routledge Handbook on Tourism and Small Island States in the Pacific, 232–42. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429019968-18.

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Kundra, Sakul, Ravinesh Rohit Prasad, Mohammad Afsar Alam, Mumtaz Alam, Unaisi Nobobo-Baba, Mohammed Feroz Ali, and Asif Iqubal. "Urbanization in the Fiji Islands during the 21st Century: A Tourism Perspective." In Advances in Urbanism, Smart Cities, and Sustainability, 123–36. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003126195-9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Tourism – Fiji"

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KATO, HIROSHI. "REMOTE ISLAND TOURISM: A CASE STUDY IN FIJI." In SUSTAINABLE TOURISM 2020. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/st200141.

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Sahady Villanueva, Antonio, José Bravo Sánchez, and Carolina Quilodrán Rubio. "Molinos de agua en Chile y España: la creación artesanal al servicio del paisaje campesino." In Seminario Internacional de Investigación en Urbanismo. Barcelona: Facultad de Arquitectura. Universidad de la República, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5821/siiu.6169.

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Los molinos chilenos, dispersos en localidades distantes entre sí, merecen una atención especial, por cuanto representan un recurso de hondo significado cultural. A modo de ejemplo, se pondrá atención en exponentes de tres sectores rurales de fuerte identidad, como son: Pañul, Frutillar y Chiloé. El modelo de gestión puede encontrarse en España, donde estos artefactos han alcanzado prestigio y admiración. En Chile, mientras tanto, hace falta recorrer un camino largo antes de que estos bienes formen parte de los planes oficiales de salvaguardia patrimonial. La creciente y diferenciada demanda que ha tenido en las últimas décadas el sector turístico ha motivado la creación de nuevas variantes, sostenidas sobre el reconocimiento de los bienes patrimoniales. Entre esas variantes aparece el turismo alternativo, que fija su atención en aquellos bienes aún poco valorados. Los molinos de agua, enclavados en el paisaje campesino, son potenciales motivos de inclusión en este tipo de turismo. Mills Chilean, scattered in distant locations together, deserve special attention, as they represent a resource of cultural meaning proof. By way of example, be care exponents of three strong identity rural sectors, such as: Pañul, Frutillar and Chiloé. The management model can be found in Spain, where these artifacts have attained prestige and admiration. In Chile, meanwhile, need to go a long way before these assets form part of official plans for safeguarding heritage. Differential and growing demand that has had in recent decades tourism has prompted the creation of new variants, sustained on the recognition of the assets. Among those variants appears alternative tourism, which fixed his attention on those little valued goods. Water mills, nestled in the rural landscape, are potential reasons for inclusion in this type of tourism.
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