National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case

The development of national parks and other protected areas has been widely promoted because of its potential for regional development in peripheral and sparsely populated areas. The argument is that the economic and social benefits seen in national parks in the USA and UK will also occur in the Swe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Linda J. T. Lundmark, Peter Fredman, Klas Sandell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2010-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss1/art19/
id doaj-c61dfa781f5f4436953b758901f992d3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c61dfa781f5f4436953b758901f992d32020-11-24T23:24:23ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872010-03-011511910.5751/ES-03175-1501193175National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish CaseLinda J. T. Lundmark0Peter Fredman1Klas Sandell2Department of Social and Economic Geography, Umeå UniversityETOURKarlstad UniversityThe development of national parks and other protected areas has been widely promoted because of its potential for regional development in peripheral and sparsely populated areas. The argument is that the economic and social benefits seen in national parks in the USA and UK will also occur in the Swedish context in the form of an increased tourism-related labor market. Our aim was to analyze the possibility of such a development both in light of the policy visions of positive regional and local development and from the adversary point of view that protection of land is making it more difficult for 15 sparsely populated mountain municipalities in Sweden to prosper. We used a database covering the entire population of the area for 1991 to 2001. Our results show that factors other than the protected areas are connected to the development of a tourism labor market. The most positively correlated variables for change in tourism employment are population growth and proximity to ski lifts. Positive population development is also correlated to a positive change in the number of people employed in forest sectors. Thus, one of the main outcomes is that the assumed and almost automatic positive relation between nature conservation and tourism can is questionable.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss1/art19/employmentforest sectorforestryGISrestructuring in peripheral areastourism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda J. T. Lundmark
Peter Fredman
Klas Sandell
spellingShingle Linda J. T. Lundmark
Peter Fredman
Klas Sandell
National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
Ecology and Society
employment
forest sector
forestry
GIS
restructuring in peripheral areas
tourism
author_facet Linda J. T. Lundmark
Peter Fredman
Klas Sandell
author_sort Linda J. T. Lundmark
title National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
title_short National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
title_full National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
title_fullStr National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
title_full_unstemmed National Parks and Protected Areas and the Role for Employment in Tourism and Forest Sectors: a Swedish Case
title_sort national parks and protected areas and the role for employment in tourism and forest sectors: a swedish case
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2010-03-01
description The development of national parks and other protected areas has been widely promoted because of its potential for regional development in peripheral and sparsely populated areas. The argument is that the economic and social benefits seen in national parks in the USA and UK will also occur in the Swedish context in the form of an increased tourism-related labor market. Our aim was to analyze the possibility of such a development both in light of the policy visions of positive regional and local development and from the adversary point of view that protection of land is making it more difficult for 15 sparsely populated mountain municipalities in Sweden to prosper. We used a database covering the entire population of the area for 1991 to 2001. Our results show that factors other than the protected areas are connected to the development of a tourism labor market. The most positively correlated variables for change in tourism employment are population growth and proximity to ski lifts. Positive population development is also correlated to a positive change in the number of people employed in forest sectors. Thus, one of the main outcomes is that the assumed and almost automatic positive relation between nature conservation and tourism can is questionable.
topic employment
forest sector
forestry
GIS
restructuring in peripheral areas
tourism
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss1/art19/
work_keys_str_mv AT lindajtlundmark nationalparksandprotectedareasandtheroleforemploymentintourismandforestsectorsaswedishcase
AT peterfredman nationalparksandprotectedareasandtheroleforemploymentintourismandforestsectorsaswedishcase
AT klassandell nationalparksandprotectedareasandtheroleforemploymentintourismandforestsectorsaswedishcase
_version_ 1716321868189794304