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Origins. Many interdependences : environmental quality for local residents quality of tourism experience economic viability of tourism industry sociopolitical context for management. Many problems : pollution and degradation unsuitable cultural change loss of biodiversity
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Many interdependences: • environmental quality for local residents • quality of tourism experience • economic viability of tourism industry • sociopolitical context for management • Many problems: • pollution and degradation • unsuitable cultural change • loss of biodiversity • unsustainable resource use Tourism Environment
MAY 2006: OFFICIAL MERGER Centre for the Tourism Environment Department Faculty of Social Sciences Faculty of AppliedHealth Sciences
A new synthesis… What is our program about?
This program is aboutsustainability(environmental, social, economic) and its application to tourism and environmental issues
Interdisciplinary degree focusing on sustainable tourism and environment Includes: • Natural and built environments • Economic and business environments • Socio-cultural and human environments • Political (policy) environments
Some of our courses • Sustainability, Environment, and Tourism • Culture, Heritage and Tourism • Sustainable Business Operation in Tourism • Nature-based Tourism • Human-dominated Ecosystems • Economics of the Environment • Tourism Planning and Development • Sustainable Integrated Waste Management • Tourism and Aquatic Ecosystems
Some of our courses • Sustainable Transportation • Ethics, Equity and Environmental Thought • Biodiversity Conservation • Ecosystem-based Planning • Global Issues in Tourism and the Environment • Cross-cultural Perspectives on Tourism and Environment • Tourism, Sex and Health • Tourism Ethics …and more
International Field Courses • Thailand / Hong Kong • New Zealand • Croatia
International Field Courses Term abroad programs in: • New Zealand (Winter 2009 - 2012)
International Field Courses Term abroad programs in: • Hong Kong and Thailand (2013)
Anthony J. Ward • Associate Professor and Chair, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • environmental economics • tourism economics • economic history • aboriginal rights and economic outcomes
David J. Telfer • Associate Professor, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • tourism as a development tool • linkages between tourism and development theory
David J. Telfer • Associate Professor, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • tourism and agriculture • culinary tourism (food and wine) • partnerships in rural tourism • souvenirs
David T. Brown • Associate Professor, Tourism and Environment • Associate Vice President, International Cooperation (1999-2004)
David T. Brown Research areas: • sustainability theory • environmental policy • trails and greenways • tourism and technology / digital convergence • waste management policy and practice • international education
Danuta Degrosbois • Assistant Professor, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • Tourism Management • Production and Operations Management • Operations Research • Management Science • Innovation Management
David Fennell • Professor, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • tourism ethics • ecotourism • nature based tourism
Atsusko Hashimoto • Associate Professor, Tourism and Environment Research areas: • sociology, anthropology and psychology of tourism • sex tourism
Atsusko Hashimoto • Associate Professor, Tourism and Environment Research areas: • social inequality and tourism • souvenirs • culinary tourism (food and wine)
Ryan Plummer • Assistant Professor, Tourism and Environment • Research areas: • riparian management • institutional arrangements in environmental and tourism management • co-management systems
Telfer Ward Brown Hashimoto Degrosbois Fennell Plummer
TREN 1F90: Tourism,Environment andSustainability COURSE OUTLINE
Course outline Accessible through your Isaak / Sakai account (later this week) or directly at http://www.brocku.ca/tren/courses/tren1f90/
Can we explore the world and travel without destroying it in the process?
The collective effects and impacts of human enterprise have stressed our ecological, economic, and socio-political systems to their limits, requiring a fundamental re-thinking of the role of humans on the planet.
Course Objectives • TREN 1F90 is an interdisciplinary introduction to key issues of sustainability and the principles and policies that affect them • major focus on tourism, its impacts, and its opportunities
Term 1: Fundamentals of Environment and Sustainability • Interdisciplinarity and what it means • Introduction to systems thinking • Principles of sustainability • Policy: what it is, how it’s made
How the world works: basic environmental literacy • biogeochemical cycles • energy flows and trophic dynamics • pollution principles and processes • Complexity and ecosystem function • Human influences on the ecosphere
Term 2: Focus on Tourism • Tourism demand • Tourism supply • Economic impacts of tourism • Social / cultural impacts of tourism • Political dimensions of tourism • Tourism planning
Texts and Readings • combination of readings from various sources (provided online) • All students are REQUIRED to have an active Brock user account to use email, Isaak / Sakai, and other online information resources.
All assignments and seminar discussion postings will be submitted and evaluated ELECTRONICALLY • See online course outline for details!
Seminars • Brock prides itself on its small-group seminar system (20 or fewer students per seminar section) • designed to expand on course topics and to develop communication skills in small groups
Seminars: what goes on? Every week, you will: • attend the seminars! • read the assigned articles / chapters • arrive prepared to discuss the topics with other seminar group members • participate in seminar activities
Seminars: what goes on? Every week starting in Week 3 (17 September), you will: • turn in a one-page summary (about 350 words) of the article being discussed, using Sakai (instructions forthcoming!) • submit to your TA a minimum of 24 hours before your seminar session • include a brief discussion of the major points, issues, concerns, or problems raised by the article
Seminars: what goes on? Once each year, you will: • assume the role of Seminar Leader for your seminar group • pose pertinent questions • stimulate discussion and interaction • identify key concepts • comment critically on the readings
Assignments Assignment 1 (term 1) – 10%Understanding Environmental Issues and Information Sources Assignment 2 (term 2) – 10%Tourism and Sustainability Paper
Exams December Progress Exam • all lecture material, readings, and media for the Fall term • scheduled by the Registrar’s Office during the December exam period. Final Exam • all lecture material, readings, and media for the Winter term • scheduled by the Registrar’s Office during the April exam period.
The fine print • You are responsible to read and understand policies and regulations in the course outline and calendar pertaining to: • Late / Missed Assignments • Quizzes and Examinations • Academic Misconduct
Where TREN is located Dept. of Tourism and Environment offices are located on the 4th floor of the Mackenzie Chown Building Main office: MC 421(campus map)
Seminar conflicts? • If you have a legitimate course conflict with your current seminar section, or • If you are not yet registered in a seminar section, please write down: • yourname, email, and Brock ID number • the number of your current seminar section (if you have one) • the numbers of all seminar sections that would work with your schedule • Hand in to Sue Jonsson-Ninniss after class