Understand Different Approaches To Planning and Development
Understand Different Approaches To Planning and Development
Understand Different Approaches To Planning and Development
Nishi Ramsurrun
Learning Outcomes
• Lecture
• Case Study
• https://prezi.com/jvs0hdlltzvx/levels-of-touris
m-planning-types-of-tourism-plannng/
Learning Outcomes
• Boosterism
• Conventional
• Interactive
• Integrated
• Market-led
• Supply-led etc.
Boosterism
• Tourism is beneficial for a destination
• Stimulate market interest and increase
economic benefits (Dredge, 1999).
• This approach does not provide a
sustainable
solution to development and is
practised only by
“politicians who philosophically or
pragmatically believe that economic
growth is
always to be promoted” (Getz, 1987,
p.10).
Conventional
• Conventional planning is
oriented
only to a plan, too vague and
all encompassing, reactive,
sporadic,
divorced from budgets and
extraneous
data producing” (Gunn 1988,
p.24)
• Not implemented state planning
Interactive
• Collaborative, co-operative and participatory
• All directed along the same lines,
the incorporation of the local community’s
opinions and desires in the planning process
• “Better decisions can be reached by means
of a participative process, even though
it is far more difficult.
Final decisions have a much better chance
of being implemented if publics have been
involved (Gunn, 1994, p.20).
Integrated
• The planning process is not a static
but a continuous process which has
to integrate changes and additional
information (de Kadt 1978)
• Therefore, tourism planning should
be flexible and adaptable; to cope
with rapidly changing conditions
and situations
Supply-led
The supply-led approach implies:
“Only those types of attractions, facilities,
and
services that the area believes can best be
integrated with minimum impacts into the
local development patterns and society are
provided, and marketing is done to attract
only
those tourists who find this product
of interest to them” (Inskeep 1991, p.30).
Market-led
• Tourism planning should be “market
oriented, providing the right product for the
consumer
• A completely market-led approach provides
whether attractions, facilities, and services
the tourist market may demand could result
in environmental degradation and loss of
socio-cultural integrity of the tourist area,
even though it brings short term economic
benefits (Inskeep 1991, p.30).
Levels of Tourism Planning
International Level