posted on 2019-09-05, 16:30authored byWei-Fen Chen, Tin-Yuet Ting
In this "cutting edge" review article, Chen and Ting maintain that new middle class tourists (especially those consumption-driven, urban dwellers from emerging economies) have acquired a taste for shopping tourism and quickly become the majority of the inbound visitors who bring business niches to the postindustrial host societies. They argue that under this trend, scant scholarly attention has been paid to the corresponding reactions, confusions, and concerns in the host societies. This article thereby offers a critical reflection on the manifestation of "unwelcome shopping tourism" as well as its local resistance and conflict in the context of changing consumption milieu contributed by the growth of Chinese tourists worldwide. The authors discuss and challenge the neoliberal presupposition guiding much of today's shopping tourism agenda that tends to maximize short-term business interests at the expense of local consumers' mundane lifestyles and native cultural identities. Chen and Ting thus propose a typology of conflicts pertaining to the growing tensions between local residents and shopping tourists, which should inform issues regarding local residents' political consumptions and sustainable tourism development in global cities. (Abstract by the Reviews Editor)
History
Citation
Tourism, Culture and Communication, 2019, 19, pp. 155–160
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Business