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Trvale udržitelný cestovní ruch a jeho uplatňování ve vybrané destinaci - Peru / The Sustainable Tourism in the Chosen Destination - PeruBlažková, Tereza January 2008 (has links)
The goal of the thesis is to describe the approach of Peru to the sustainable tourism. The thesis analyses therefore the situation of the sustainable tourism in Peru. In the first part, the tourism is characterized with its future trends, positive and negative impacts on the society and the environment. Hereafter, the conception of sustainability is introduced followed by the short characterization of Peru as a tourist destination and its approach to the sustainable tourism.
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The 'reinvented' state in emerging industries: a comparison of tourism in Peru and ChileTamborini, Christopher Ryan 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Heritage Conservation and Tourism in the Historic Center of Arequipa, PeruRivera Garcia, Andrea Delia, 1981- 06 1900 (has links)
xii, 124 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), col. maps / This thesis explores the complex relationship between heritage conservation and tourism in the Historic Center of Arequipa, a World Cultural Heritage Site in Peru. Although it has been recognized that tourism impacts the people and places where it occurs and, through this, it impacts the tourists' own experience, the challenge that tourism poses to efforts to conserve heritage resources is not always recognized. Even though heritage conservation efforts in Arequipa have been strengthened in the last ten years, tourism has been increasing steadily without appropriate planning, therefore challenging the desired balance between conservation and tourism in the historic center. The relationship between heritage conservation and tourism has been assessed, and tourism opportunities and threats for heritage conservation have been identified. Based on the existing Master Plan for the Historic Center of Arequipa guiding conservation efforts in the city, recommendations for conservation and tourism planning have been established. / Committee in charge: Robert Z. Melnick, Chairperson;
Henry Kunowski, Member
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In the name of the tourist : landscape, heritage, and social change in ChincheroGarcia, Pablo January 2015 (has links)
This thesis examines social change in the Quechua-speaking town of Chinchero (Peru), located 30 km away from the city of Cuzco. It does so by studying the conditions created by touristic development in the Region. It is an ethnography that builds on, and dialogues with, previous ethnographies done in Chinchero before. It focuses on issues of landscape and cultural heritage, as these are some of the domains most affected by the changes brought about by tourism, among other forms of modernization. The thesis looks at processes of re-territorialization and social exclusion that have followed the reconversion of the Inca ruins into an Archaeological Park. It also studies the town´s reputed textile tradition in a context of growing commercialization. Over the last few years, coinciding with a surge in tourism in the region, the tourist demand for “authentic” indigenous crafts has fostered significant changes in the textile production of Chinchero. The multiplication of weaving centers where the ethnicity is performed for the tourist gaze, plus the social implications of this new mode of social organization, comes into scrutiny. Another major focus of attention is the project of the New International Airport of Cuzco in Chinchero land. The airport is a direct consequence of tourist development in the Region. This thesis explores processes of social disruption and environmental conflict as the project is deeply dividing the community and raising expectations of progress that that are unlikely to be met. Additionally, the airport intersects with issues of indigeneity and the redefinition of the ethnic identity as the project engages with the supposed incompatibility between being indigenous, and thus “traditional”, and being modern, a process that involves the commercialization of “ancestral” land and the heavy reworking of a landscape where the ancestors and other-than-human forces still dwell.
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