Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development

Cultural heritage, considered as a tool for sustainable tourism development and place branding, makes a destination appealing to visitors; hence, cultural heritage tourism can be a driving force for economic growth in cities and regions. Polycentricity is a useful multi-scalar concept in spatial the...

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Main Authors: Stella Kostopoulou, Paraskevi-Kali Sofianou, Konstantinos Tsiokanos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1893
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spelling doaj-93f61afaacb241ac98ead9d017f1acd42021-02-10T00:07:02ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-02-01131893189310.3390/su13041893Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism DevelopmentStella Kostopoulou0Paraskevi-Kali Sofianou1Konstantinos Tsiokanos2School of Economics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, GreeceSchool of Civil Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, GreeceSchool of Civil Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, GreeceCultural heritage, considered as a tool for sustainable tourism development and place branding, makes a destination appealing to visitors; hence, cultural heritage tourism can be a driving force for economic growth in cities and regions. Polycentricity is a useful multi-scalar concept in spatial theory that describes how adjacent urban centers can interact with each other, creating synergies and generating broader spatial networks. Cultural heritage and tourism, perceived as important factors of integration in a polycentric spatial structure, can further promote regional branding strategies. In this paper, a polycentricity index is introduced as a methodological tool for networking cultural heritage destinations, with an application to the Silk Road heritage. Silk Road cultural assets traced on the historical Silk Road routes linking East and West, can serve as tourist attraction poles and as an essential component for branding destinations through networking at various spatial scales. The Region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace in Northern Greece, endowed with a plethora of Silk Road cultural assets, most of which are still untapped, is used to highlight the proposed methodology. The ultimate objective is the designation of polycentric destination networks based on Silk Road assets, in order to build regional branding opportunities over the Region.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1893Silk Roadcultural heritagepolycentricitytourism networksregional branding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stella Kostopoulou
Paraskevi-Kali Sofianou
Konstantinos Tsiokanos
spellingShingle Stella Kostopoulou
Paraskevi-Kali Sofianou
Konstantinos Tsiokanos
Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
Sustainability
Silk Road
cultural heritage
polycentricity
tourism networks
regional branding
author_facet Stella Kostopoulou
Paraskevi-Kali Sofianou
Konstantinos Tsiokanos
author_sort Stella Kostopoulou
title Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
title_short Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
title_full Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
title_fullStr Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
title_full_unstemmed Silk Road Heritage Branding and Polycentric Tourism Development
title_sort silk road heritage branding and polycentric tourism development
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Cultural heritage, considered as a tool for sustainable tourism development and place branding, makes a destination appealing to visitors; hence, cultural heritage tourism can be a driving force for economic growth in cities and regions. Polycentricity is a useful multi-scalar concept in spatial theory that describes how adjacent urban centers can interact with each other, creating synergies and generating broader spatial networks. Cultural heritage and tourism, perceived as important factors of integration in a polycentric spatial structure, can further promote regional branding strategies. In this paper, a polycentricity index is introduced as a methodological tool for networking cultural heritage destinations, with an application to the Silk Road heritage. Silk Road cultural assets traced on the historical Silk Road routes linking East and West, can serve as tourist attraction poles and as an essential component for branding destinations through networking at various spatial scales. The Region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace in Northern Greece, endowed with a plethora of Silk Road cultural assets, most of which are still untapped, is used to highlight the proposed methodology. The ultimate objective is the designation of polycentric destination networks based on Silk Road assets, in order to build regional branding opportunities over the Region.
topic Silk Road
cultural heritage
polycentricity
tourism networks
regional branding
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/4/1893
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