The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis

Over the last two decades, the awareness about landscape as a common good and the definition of tourism as a relevant driver of territorial development have both increased contributions to contemporary reflections on places and mobilities. From a scientific point of view, the need for structured con...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sabrina Meneghello
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Land
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/4/417
id doaj-2c6dfcb9164247e48013be61200f1bc6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2c6dfcb9164247e48013be61200f1bc62021-04-15T23:02:36ZengMDPI AGLand2073-445X2021-04-011041741710.3390/land10040417The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic AnalysisSabrina Meneghello0Department of Historical and Geographic Sciences and the Ancient World (DISSGeA), University of Padova, 35141 Padova, ItalyOver the last two decades, the awareness about landscape as a common good and the definition of tourism as a relevant driver of territorial development have both increased contributions to contemporary reflections on places and mobilities. From a scientific point of view, the need for structured contributions on the “landscape–tourism” nexus has been stressed. In fact, tourism and landscape studies are fed by many disciplines, often returning sectorial articles, sometimes lacking in organicity. Considering recent literary reviews carried out through bibliometric and content analyses, the present paper intends to map different ways of defining and understanding this complex interrelation as it emerges from the main research areas. From geographical contributions to managerial perspectives addressing destination planning and development, and from sociological non-representational to actor network theories applied to tourism, among others, the nexus is faced by approaches and concepts that are both specific and recurrent. Expressions such as “tourist landscape”, “tourism landscape”, “touristscape” with their different meanings orient this literary investigation informing a tentative conceptual framework where interrelated spatial, social, and symbolic dimensions emerge with a key definitional role. The general aim was to possibly enrich the reflection on this relationship, providing new definitional contributions and conceptual frameworks able to coherently influence both theory and practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/4/417tourist landscapebibliographic analysesbibliometric analysiscontent analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sabrina Meneghello
spellingShingle Sabrina Meneghello
The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
Land
tourist landscape
bibliographic analyses
bibliometric analysis
content analysis
author_facet Sabrina Meneghello
author_sort Sabrina Meneghello
title The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
title_short The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
title_full The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
title_fullStr The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
title_full_unstemmed The Tourism–Landscape Nexus: Assessment and Insights from a Bibliographic Analysis
title_sort tourism–landscape nexus: assessment and insights from a bibliographic analysis
publisher MDPI AG
series Land
issn 2073-445X
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Over the last two decades, the awareness about landscape as a common good and the definition of tourism as a relevant driver of territorial development have both increased contributions to contemporary reflections on places and mobilities. From a scientific point of view, the need for structured contributions on the “landscape–tourism” nexus has been stressed. In fact, tourism and landscape studies are fed by many disciplines, often returning sectorial articles, sometimes lacking in organicity. Considering recent literary reviews carried out through bibliometric and content analyses, the present paper intends to map different ways of defining and understanding this complex interrelation as it emerges from the main research areas. From geographical contributions to managerial perspectives addressing destination planning and development, and from sociological non-representational to actor network theories applied to tourism, among others, the nexus is faced by approaches and concepts that are both specific and recurrent. Expressions such as “tourist landscape”, “tourism landscape”, “touristscape” with their different meanings orient this literary investigation informing a tentative conceptual framework where interrelated spatial, social, and symbolic dimensions emerge with a key definitional role. The general aim was to possibly enrich the reflection on this relationship, providing new definitional contributions and conceptual frameworks able to coherently influence both theory and practice.
topic tourist landscape
bibliographic analyses
bibliometric analysis
content analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/10/4/417
work_keys_str_mv AT sabrinameneghello thetourismlandscapenexusassessmentandinsightsfromabibliographicanalysis
AT sabrinameneghello tourismlandscapenexusassessmentandinsightsfromabibliographicanalysis
_version_ 1721525916846260224