This book examines the dilemma of overdependence on tourism in Caribbean countries and territories, and the need for a resilient path to address the industrys vulnerability in the face of natural disasters. The chapters in the book question how tourism resilience is understood and practiced in Caribbean small island developing states (SIDS) and the factors that inform, undermine, or indeed redefine the sustainable resilience agenda for these territories.
With its overreliance on tourism and vulnerability to climate, the Caribbean region finds itself susceptible and in need of an innovative approach in order to survive economically. Contributors to this volume touch on all three sustainability pillars and spanning across many tourism sector considerations, such as product development, stakeholder management, hotel management, marketing and entrepreneurship.
By spanning the geography of the Anglophone and Spanish Caribbean this book offers a smorgasbord of conceptual and applied perspectives to researchers in the area of tourism resilience in SIDS. It also presents strategic considerations to public and private sector practitioners in implementing measures to strengthen the competitive positioning of their destinations as they contend with the dynamism of the external and internal environments.
Part 1:-Background and Theoretical Context.
Chapter 1:- Introduction.-
Chapter 2:- Understanding Small Island States & Territories by Acolla
Lewis-Cameron & Leslie-Ann Jordan-Miller .
Chapter 3:- Conceptualising
Resilience in Small Island States by Sherma Roberts .- Part 2:-Environmental
Resilience.
Chapter 4:- Cruise Tourism and Resilience in Marine Ecosystems
in the Caribbean: A Socio-Environmental Study of St. Lucia by Myrna Ellis.-
Chapter 5:- Tourism Resilience in the Caribbean island of Cozumel: Best
practice and high risk įreas by Kennedy Obombo Magio.
Chapter 6:- A
resilient eco-tourism island: A case study of Dominica and its tourism
recovery strategies post 2017 Hurricane Maria by Tenisha Brown-Williams and
Amanda Charles.- Part 3:- Socio-Cultural Resilience.
Chapter 7:- Community
resilience in the face of a natural disaster: Puerto Ricos adventure
tourism industry by Mechelle Best and José H. Gonzalez.
Chapter 8:-An
Integrated Path Towards a Resilient Tourism Sector in North-East Tobago by
Aljoscha Wothke, Joanna Moses-Wothke and Leslie-Ann Jordan.
Chapter 9:-From
exclusive to exclusion zone and back again: Marketing Montserrat under the
Mount Chance eruptions by Johnathan Skinner.
Chapter 10:-Building a
resilient tourism future through youth involvement and consumer-centric
service excellence in Grenada by Marion Joppe & Kimberly Thomas-Francois.-
Part 3:-Economic Resilience.- Chpater 11:-Increasing the Resilience of Micro,
Small and Medium Tourism Enterprises to Tropical Cyclones in Small Island
Developing States by Thalia Balkaran and David Smith.
Chapter 12:-Building
Resilience by Strengthening the Link between Tourism and Agriculture: An
Assessment of the Purchasing Patterns of Selected Hotels in Jamaica by Eritha
Huntley-Lewis, Tolulope Bewaji and Clive Scott.
Chapter:- An analysis of
economic and political resilience strategies adopted by The Bahamas as an
archipelagic Small Island Development State by Sophia Rolle.
Chapter
14:-Integrative Entrepreneurship as a Tourism Resilience Strategy for
Sustainable Development: A Case Study of Castara, Tobago by Shinelle Smith
and Leslie-Ann Jordan-Miller.
Chapter 15:- Hotel Resilience to Terrorist
Threats Is there a case for Barbados? by Vincent Bradshaw.
Chapter
16:- The tension between lives and livelihoods- an analysis of resilience
strategies by tourism-dependent Caribbean territories by Sherma Roberts.-
Conclusion.
Acolla Lewis-Cameron is Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad. She is the lead editor of Marketing Island Destinations: Concepts and Cases and co-author of Contemporary Caribbean Tourism: Concepts and Cases.
Leslie-Ann Jordan is a Senior Lecturer of Hospitality and Tourism Management in the Department of Management Studies at the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus, Trinidad. She is the lead editor of Sports Event Management: The Caribbean Experience. Her research interests include tourism development in small island developing states in the Caribbean, tourism planning and development and tourism policy and decision-making
Sherma Roberts is Senior Lecturer in Tourism at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados. She has co-edited three books and co-authored Contemporary Caribbean Tourism: Concept and Cases