Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012

Israel is a popular tourist destination which has by afflicted by varying levels of terrorism against civilians over the course of its history. A longitudinal analysis of data pertaining to tourism and terrorism is undertaken to examine how terrorism affects patterns of tourism. It is found that on...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Erik Cohen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Technological University Dublin
Series:International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-2f0e6617f4054826afdd33c89a94b15c2020-11-25T03:04:37ZengTechnological University DublinInternational Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage2009-7379l110.21427/D7CX2PTourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012Erik Cohen0Bar IlanIsrael is a popular tourist destination which has by afflicted by varying levels of terrorism against civilians over the course of its history. A longitudinal analysis of data pertaining to tourism and terrorism is undertaken to examine how terrorism affects patterns of tourism. It is found that on the macro-level, tourism to Israel continues to grow although it experiences periodic declines corresponding with times of high terrorist activity. National and religious subpopulations of tourists react differently terrorism at the destination. Overall, Jews are proportionally more likely than non-Jews to continue to visit Israel during times of conflict, but this varies among Diaspora communities. Moreover, among US Jewish tourist, the strongly religious populations represented a greater percentage of visitors during years of high terrorism. This preliminary analysis explores how internal structural features of the Jewish community (such as Jewish educational settings and family ties to Israelis), external factors of the home country (such as anti-Semitism or the economic situation) and national and cultural value orientation affect tourism patterns. The impact of these factors on tourism deserves continued research.ctors of the home country (such as anti-Semitism or the economic situation) and national and cultural value orientation affect tourism patterns. The impact of these factors on tourism deserves continued research.tourismterrorismIsraelnationalityjewish
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erik Cohen
spellingShingle Erik Cohen
Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
tourism
terrorism
Israel
nationality
jewish
author_facet Erik Cohen
author_sort Erik Cohen
title Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
title_short Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
title_full Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
title_fullStr Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
title_full_unstemmed Tourism and Terror: a Case Study: Israel 1948-2012
title_sort tourism and terror: a case study: israel 1948-2012
publisher Technological University Dublin
series International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
issn 2009-7379
description Israel is a popular tourist destination which has by afflicted by varying levels of terrorism against civilians over the course of its history. A longitudinal analysis of data pertaining to tourism and terrorism is undertaken to examine how terrorism affects patterns of tourism. It is found that on the macro-level, tourism to Israel continues to grow although it experiences periodic declines corresponding with times of high terrorist activity. National and religious subpopulations of tourists react differently terrorism at the destination. Overall, Jews are proportionally more likely than non-Jews to continue to visit Israel during times of conflict, but this varies among Diaspora communities. Moreover, among US Jewish tourist, the strongly religious populations represented a greater percentage of visitors during years of high terrorism. This preliminary analysis explores how internal structural features of the Jewish community (such as Jewish educational settings and family ties to Israelis), external factors of the home country (such as anti-Semitism or the economic situation) and national and cultural value orientation affect tourism patterns. The impact of these factors on tourism deserves continued research.ctors of the home country (such as anti-Semitism or the economic situation) and national and cultural value orientation affect tourism patterns. The impact of these factors on tourism deserves continued research.
topic tourism
terrorism
Israel
nationality
jewish
work_keys_str_mv AT erikcohen tourismandterroracasestudyisrael19482012
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