Coastal tourism, sustainability, and climate change in the Caribbean. Volume I, Beaches and hotels / edited by Martha Honey with Samantha Hogenson.
Material type: TextSeries: Tourism and hospitality management collectionPublication details: New York : Business Expert Press, 2017Description: xviii, 148 p. : ill., maps ; 23 cmISBN: 9781631574733 (pbk.)Subject(s): Caribbean Area -- Environmental conditions | Tourism -- Environmental aspects -- Caribbean AreaLOC classification: GE160.C27 | C63 2017Summary: he Caribbean is the most tourism-dependent region in the world, with an average of 50 million visitors a year. Most of its tourism infrastructure, including its 2,600 hotels as well as nearly three-quarters of its people, are concentrated along its coastlines. While the Caribbean island nations contribute less than 1 percent of carbon emissions to global climate change, they are among the most vulnerable to its impacts, including increasingly fierce and frequent hurricanes, sea level rise, hotter temperatures, and loss of coral and mangroves. Yet many vacationers, home owners, governments, and tourism developers and operators fail to fully grasp the realities of climate change. Two truths run through the essays and case studies in this edited volume: one, many of these environmental problems predate but are exacerbated by climate change, and two, many of the techniques for mitigating and adapting to climate change are part of the tool kit of sustainable tourism that has been honed over recent decades. Therefore, companies and coastal destinations adhering to the socially and environmentally sustainable practices such as beach setbacks, soft engineering, renewable energy, water recycling and reduction, and "green" architecture are likely to be more resilient in coping with climate change. Tourism master planning and building today requires a new normal that incorporates present risks and climate change protections using smart planning, sustainable design, and responsible construction.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Staff Circulation | APU Library Open Shelf | Book | GE160.C27 C63 2017 c.1 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00016489 | |
General Circulation | APU Library Open Shelf | Book | GE160.C27 C63 2017 c.2 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 2 | Available | 00016490 |
Browsing APU Library shelves, Shelving location: Open Shelf, Collection: Book Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
GE105 .E93 2018 c.1 The environment / | GE105 .M94 2014 c.1 Environmental issues & solutions : | GE160.C27 C63 2017 c.1 Coastal tourism, sustainability, and climate change in the Caribbean. | GE160.C27 C63 2017 c.2 Coastal tourism, sustainability, and climate change in the Caribbean. | GE170 .O54 2017 c.1 The environment and international relations / | GE170 .S75 2018 c.1 Global environmental politics : problems, policy, and practice / | GE195.7 .S36 2021 c.1 Psychology for sustainability / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
he Caribbean is the most tourism-dependent region in the world, with an average of 50 million visitors a year. Most of its tourism infrastructure, including its 2,600 hotels as well as nearly three-quarters of its people, are concentrated along its coastlines. While the Caribbean island nations contribute less than 1 percent of carbon emissions to global climate change, they are among the most vulnerable to its impacts, including increasingly fierce and frequent hurricanes, sea level rise, hotter temperatures, and loss of coral and mangroves. Yet many vacationers, home owners, governments, and tourism developers and operators fail to fully grasp the realities of climate change. Two truths run through the essays and case studies in this edited volume: one, many of these environmental problems predate but are exacerbated by climate change, and two, many of the techniques for mitigating and adapting to climate change are part of the tool kit of sustainable tourism that has been honed over recent decades. Therefore, companies and coastal destinations adhering to the socially and environmentally sustainable practices such as beach setbacks, soft engineering, renewable energy, water recycling and reduction, and "green" architecture are likely to be more resilient in coping with climate change. Tourism master planning and building today requires a new normal that incorporates present risks and climate change protections using smart planning, sustainable design, and responsible construction.
NON-RET. CO-PUB. W/ CREST. NEW SERIES. PAPERS BASED ON 2015 CONF
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