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Current Issues in Tourism
Editor: C. Michael Hall (Department of Management, College of Business and Economics, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand) and Chris Cooper (Foundation Professor of Tourism, University of Queensland, Australia)
Michael and Chris are joint editor of the book series Aspects of Tourism.
Reviews Editor John Jenkins (University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia)


Volume: 8  Number: 4  Page: 286–305

Planning Host and Guest Interactions: Moving Beyond the Empty Meeting Ground in African Encounters
René van der Duim1, Karen Peters1 and Stephen Wearing2
1Department of Environmental Sciences, Wageningen Uniiversity, Wageningen, The Netherlands and 2School of Leisure and Tourism Studies, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia

In many senses viewing the ‘other’ has always been a part of the tourist activity of dominant cultures. The ‘other’ has been seen as a source of difference and excitement with possibilities for exotic pleasure while at the same time dominant cultures have reinforced their own sense of superiority through viewing the ‘other’. The view from the ‘other’ is now becoming a part of tourism research and enabling mechanisms for this view are being developed in tourism planning. This paper seeks to examine how we can move beyond MacCannell’s view of the contact between tourists and hosts as an ‘empty meeting ground’. Just as postcolonial theorists have been critical of the exclusion of the ‘other’ in tourism theory, we argue for the voice of the ‘other’ to be heard in tourism planning practices. In this paper we examine the extent this is able to bring benefits to the process of community-based tourist development in developing countries such as Tanzania and Kenya. The paper theoretically scrutinises the relation between and the fluidity of the concepts of tourism, communities and power and the actuality of approaches to tourism planning that do not involve a submissive, subservient, exoticised and inferiorised view of the ‘other’. The particulars of inclusion of the voice of the ‘other’ bring some fresh insights to Western notions of community-based tourism planning.

Keywords: tourismscapes, third space, communities, power, Tanzania, Kenya

© 2005 R. van der Duim et al.

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