Reconnecting tourism after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas

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Abstract

One of the transformations induced by the almost complete halt of tourism due to the COVID-19 pandemic has been a turning of the tourism sectors to a greater orientation towards their host communities. The enclavic tendencies of tourism areas, along with a multilayered approach to alterity gives insight into ongoing changes in the Quebec, Canada, tourism industry that have been enhanced by the COVID-19 pandemic. These changes points to a relinking of tourism to the needs of the host communities as part of a survival strategy in a time when there are no tourists, and could become, in the long run, a resilience strategy. On the other hand, there is a possibility of a reinforcement of the alterity and a further delinking of tourism in a “6 foot-tourism world” where sanitary safety would be at the core of a closed and controlled tourism development.

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APA

Lapointe, D. (2020). Reconnecting tourism after COVID-19: the paradox of alterity in tourism areas. Tourism Geographies, 22(3), 633–638. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616688.2020.1762115

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