Tourism and the Consumption of Wildlife: Hunting, Shooting and Sport Fishing

Hardback

Main Details

Title Tourism and the Consumption of Wildlife: Hunting, Shooting and Sport Fishing
Authors and Contributors      Edited by Brent Lovelock
SeriesContemporary Geographies of Leisure, Tourism and Mobility
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:312
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156
Category/GenreTourism industry
ISBN/Barcode 9780415403818
ClassificationsDewey:333.9549
Audience
Undergraduate
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 29 black & white illustrations, 15 black & white tables, 14 black & white halftones, 15 black & white line drawings

Publishing Details

Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint Routledge
Publication Date 25 October 2007
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Consumptive forms of wildlife tourism (hunting, shooting and fishing) have become a topic of interest - both to the tourism industry, in terms of destinations seeking to establish or grow this sector, and to other stakeholders such as environmental organisations, animal-rights groups, and the general public. Hunting tourism, in particular, has come under fire with accusations that it is contributing to the demise of some species. Practices such as "canned hunting" (within fenced safari parks) or the use of hounds are described as unethical, and fishing tourism too has attracted recent negative publicity as it is said to be cruel. At the same time, however, many peripheral and indigenous communities around the world are strategising how to capitalise on consumptive forms of wildlife tourism. This book addresses a range of contentious issues facing the consumptive wildlife tourism sector across a number of destinations in Europe, North America, Africa, India, Arabia and Oceania. Practices such as baited bear hunting, trophy hunting of threatened species, and hunting for conservation are debated, along with the impact of this type of tourism on indigenous communities and on wider societies. Research on all aspects of "consumptive wildlife tourism" is included, which for the purposes of the book is defined to include all tourism that involves the intended killing of wildlife for sport purposes, and may include the harvest of wildlife products. This includes, among others, recreational hunting, big-game hunting and safari operations, traditional/indigenous hunting, game-bird shooting, hunting with hounds, freshwater angling and saltwater game fishing etc. This is the first book to specifically address tourist aspects of consumption of wildlife. It will appeal to tourism and recreation academics and students, tourism industry operators, community tourism planners and wildlife managers.

Author Biography

Dr Brent Lovelock is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Tourism at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Reviews

"Offering examples from all over the globe, the contributors look at the historical, cultural, and sociological importance, to the world's marginalized cultures, of extracting wildlife...Recommended." -- J.P. Tiefenbacher, Choice 'The book is one of the best collection of empirical and theoretical works in tourism in recent years' - Raynald Harvey Lemelin: School of Outdoor Recreation, Parks, and Tourism; Lakehead University, Ontario, Canada 'The editor and authors should be commended for their pragmatic approach to CWT that highlights both positive and negative impacts. The courage to address the impacts of wildlife tourism is commendable and should be emulated by other researchers that continue to perpetuate the myth of "non-consumptive" activities. This book is highly recommended.' - Raynald Harvey Lemelin: School of Outdoor Recreation, Parks, and Tourism; Lakehead University, Ontario, Canada