Tourism KQ3 SCH
Tourism KQ3 SCH
Tourism KQ3 SCH
(ELECTIVE GEO)
• Can be both positive and negative
1) Economic
2) Socio-Cultural
3) Environmental
Economic impacts
(Positive)
Employment
opportunities
Growth in
income
Development of
infrastructure &
facilities
Positive Economic Impacts:
Employment Opportunities
• Work performed for a wage or
salary, in cash or in kind.
• Increases employment
opportunities in tourism-related
jobs.
- Directly linked e.g. workers in hotels,
transportation, souvenir shops and
tour agencies.
- Indirectly linked e.g. taxi drivers,
retail shop owners.
- 56.7% of Maldives population
involved in tourism industry.
Tourism is the largest economic industry in Maldives in earning foreign
exchange revenues and generating employment in the country.
• Tourism industries tend to be labour-intensive
Art
Way of eating
Positive social impacts:
Preservation of Local Cultures &
Heritage
• Tourists are interested in authentic local cultures
(dance, rituals etc.).
• E.g. tourism has revived Balinese interest in their
own traditions & culture which reinforced their
cultural identity and pride.
Positive social impacts:
Preservation of Local Cultures & Heritage
• Tourists interested in the way of life: Temple stay experience in
monasteries. The accommodations are inexpensive and the
rules are the same--no smoking, drinking or loud music.
• But staying in the monasteries and eating with pilgrims and
monks gives one a sense of the rhythm of religious life
throughout Asia.
Positive social impacts:
Preservation of Local Cultures & Heritage
• Important sites of heritage and culture are
preserved and restored to their former glory due to
tourism. E.g. Angkor Wat complex in Siem Reap,
Cambodia, has entry fees that help fund
conservation efforts.
Positive social impacts:
Examples of other sites restored to glory:
• Great Pyramids of Giza, Egypt
• Borobudur Temple, Indonesia
• Historical Church, Malacca
Social impacts
(Negative)
Dilution of local
customs and
heritage
Increased crime
rate
Negative social impacts:
Dilution of local customs & Heritage
• Tourism can turn local cultures into commodities when religious
rituals, ethnic rites and festivals are reduced to conform to tourist
expectations. Sacred sites and objects may not be respected when
they are perceived as goods/commodities to trade. Overtime,
cultural erosion may occur due to commodification.
• E.g. Kecak Dance, part of traditional religious ritual performed on
special occasions in Bali, has been shortened (to fit into tourists’
itinerary), taken out of its religious context and performed on a
daily basis, to different groups of paying tourists.
• Some dancers may deliberately pose for tourists to take
photographs.
• Therefore, the authenticity and significance of these cultural
events may be reduced when they become commercialised.
Negative social impacts:
Dilution of local customs & Heritage
• Commercialisation of cultures and
customs.
• E.g. Kayan Lahwi women in
Thailand
• Local business people charge
tourists around US$10 to enter
villages to take photos with the
“long-necked dragon women”.
• Hence some tourists treat the
women as exhibits that they have
paid for. These tourists sometimes
aggressively take photographs of
the women without permission.
PADAUNG
or “long
necks” in
Northern
Thailand
“Zooification” where the local tribes (long-necked
women) treated as exhibits
Tourists become insensitive to local customs and cultures e.g. sacred
sites and objects may not be respected.
Conservation of
natural
environment
Positive environmental impacts:
Conservation of Natural Environments
• Tourism earnings to fund protection of coral reefs,
rainforests, mountainous areas etc.
• E.g. Sepilok Orang-Utan Rehabilitation Centre in Sabah
Malaysia, partly relies on visitor entry fees to pay its staff
who help rehabilitate orang-utans that have been injured
or orphaned.
• In Kenya, the survival of animals in the country’s nature reserves
and national parks relies on funding received from international
tourists who want to see these animals in the wild.
• A single lion can generate US$7,000 a year in tourist revenue and a
herd of elephants around US$600,000 a year.
• The money raised from wildlife tourism becomes a way to continue
to preserve the animals and their habitats.
Environmental impacts
(Negative)
Vandalism
Littering and pollution
Destruction of habitats
Increased carbon
footprint
Increased congestion
Negative environmental impacts:
Vandalism
• Act of deliberately damaging tourism sites
• Overnight campers
use the site as a
public toilet.
Note: there are currently no World Heritage Sites listed by UNESCO in Brunei
and Timor Leste.
Sustainable Tourism via Support from Locals
COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISM (CBT)
Case Study: Candirejo Village in Java, Indonesia
• Locals can also play a key role in conserving and protecting
tourist areas.
• With support from the government, the villagers in
Candirejo set up a cooperative in 2003 to manage ad
implement the community’s tourism-related programmes.
• The villagers also participated in decision-making through
discussions and consultations with the cooperative about
the programmes to be carried out.
• These programmes included developing homestay
accommodations, developing organic farms and organising
local transport.
Sustainable Tourism via Support from Locals
COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISM (CBT)
Case Study: Candirejo Village in Java, Indonesia
• The programmes also trained villagers to produce
handicrafts, to provide catering and to work as tour
guides.
• By 2004, the village had 22 homestays, 22 andongs (local
transport of horse-drawn carts) and 6 local restaurants.
• This was in contrast in 2002 when the village had only 10
homestays, 5 andongs and no restaurants.
• The village also reported 63 new jobs, 5 new businesses
and a 12.5% increase in average income per villager from
2001 to 2003.
Sustainable Tourism via Support from Locals
COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISM (CBT)
Case Study: Candirejo Village in Java, Indonesia
Plus points:
• Locals have a say over tourism activities and promote
authentic traditional culture.
• Tourists experience community lifestyle by partaking in
above activities.
• CBT is both socially and economically sustainable because
local people can benefit from the jobs created.
• Money earned from tourism can be used to improve local
amenities/facilities (roads, schools, clinics etc.) and living
conditions of the villagers.
Sustainable Tourism via Support from Locals
COMMUNITY-BASED TOURISM (CBT)
Case Study: Candirejo Village in Java, Indonesia
Drawbacks:
• Local communities often face funding problems when
setting up businesses or investing in vehicles to facilitate
tourism.
• As CBT is conducted on a small scale, there is less revenue
to earn from tourists.
• Some tourists may have unrealistic expectations of their
trips. They may be dissatisfied with the conditions of
village life and make unreasonable demands to the villages
(want ceiling fans etc.), resulting in conflict with locals.
• Seasonal nature of tourism may likely to cause a drop in
incomes during off-peak seasons.
Sustainable Tourism via Ecotourism
• Ecotourism is RESPONSIBLE travel to NATURAL
AREAS that CONSERVES the environment and
IMPROVES the well-being of the local people.
• It aims to let visitors appreciate the scenery of the
area and help them appreciate local culture. It also
ensures that part of the revenue earned is put back
into maintaining and protecting the area.
• There is conscious effort in such tours to increase
the employment of locals and minimize the impact
on the natural environment by reducing the volume
of waste generated, using recycled materials and
conserving resources such as water and energy.
Sustainable Tourism via Ecotourism
Case Study: Waitomo Glowworm Caves (New Zealand)
2. Planning Authorities
• Implementing laws and policies
• Case studies:
- Wakatobi National Park (Indonesia)
- Matang Mangrove Forest (Perak, Malaysia)
- Machu Picchu (Peru, South America)
- Sepilok Orang Utan Rehab Centre (Malaysia)
- Bhutan’s “high-value, low-volume” tourism policy
- Singapore (Chinatown and the IRs)
3. Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)
• NGOs operate independently of the government.
• The International Ecotourism Society (TIES), the largest and
oldest ecotourism organization in the world, seek to educate
tourists, as well as influence the tourism industry,
governments and other key organizations to integrate the
principles of ecotourism into their operations and policies.
Example:
• The Nature Society of
Singapore (NSS) is run by
volunteers who organize
activities such as conservation
projects and nature walks,
hence bringing greater
awareness of environmental
issues.
• In 2001, NSS played a critical role in reverting plans to reclaim
mudflats of Chek Jawa, which is a natural coastal habitat on Pulau
Ubin.
• As a result, the unique wildlife there has been preserved, and in
2007, a boardwalk was constructed to allow visitors to tour the
area in a sustainable manner.
• NSS had also successfully campaigned for the protection of the
mangrove and bird populations at Sungei Buloh – presently named
as Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve.
• HOWEVER, NGOs have difficulty in obtaining
external funding.
• As non-profit organizations that often rely on
donations, NGOs may be hampered by the lack of
financial resources.
• Furthermore, NGOs also need support such as
manpower, expertise and marketing campaigns
from the local communities and government.
4. Tour Operators
• International tour operator organizations such as the Tour
Operators Initiative (TOI) advise tour operators on the
implementation of the principles of sustainable tourism in
their tour packages.
• TOI also encourages tour operators to brief tourists on
responsible behavior at their destinations.
• Tour operators are in the best position to regulate tourist
behavior to maintain quality of tourist sites – preventing
tourists from littering, wandering into restricted areas or
making too much noise.
Example:
• A briefing by a tour guide at Machu
Picchu (Peru), a UNESCO World
Heritage Site, is often the fastest way
for tourists to know about the
culture and history of this place.
• This briefing also serves to remind
tourists to practise appropriate
behaviour (stay within walking path).