TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig,...

32
24-26 SEPTEMBER 2018 TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS UIT THE ARCTIC UNIVERSITY OF NORWAY, ALTA, NORWAY #27THNORDIC PROGRAM AND PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Transcript of TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig,...

Page 1: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

1

24-26 SEPTEMBER 2018

TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS

UIT THE ARCTIC UNIVERSITY OF NORWAY, ALTA, NORWAY

#27THNORDIC

PROGRAM AND PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Page 2: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

2

24.09 25.09 26.09

Optional full day excursion

09.00-17.00

Opening of symposium, Campus Alta

08.30

Keynote Carina Ren09.00-09.45

Keynote Bryan Grimwood09.45-10.30

Keynote Britt Kramvig

08.30-09.15

09.15-09.30 Practical information

Break

10.30-10.50

Break

09.30-09.50

Optional half day excursion

13.30-17.00

Parallel sessions I

10.50-12.10

Parallel sessions III

09.50-11.10

Lunch

12.10-13.40

Lunch

11.10-12.35

Parallel sessions II

13.40-15.00 Parallel sessions IV

12.35-13.55Workshop

14.40-15.10

Registration opens, Campus Alta

17.00

Break

15.00-15.25

Break

13.55-14.15

Workshops

15.25-17.25

Parallel sessions V

14.15-15.35

Break

15.35-15.50

Reception, Campus Alta

18.00-21.00

Arctic Gala Dinner, Sorrisniva

19.00-23.30

Parallel sessions VI

15.50-17.10

Optional Northern lights tour

20.30-00.30

Closure

17.10-17.25

PROGRAM OVERVIEW - #27THNORDIC

Program details on pages 14-22.

Page 3: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

3

DEAR COLLEAGUES AND FRIENDSWelcome to Alta and the 27th Nordic Symposium on Tourism and Hospitality Research.

For the second time, our Department of Tourism and Northern Studies is hosting this event. Last time, it was 18-21 November, 1999. At that time, we were Finnmark University College. In 2013, the college merged with University of Tromsø and became UiT – The Arctic University of Norway. In 2018, UiT – The Arctic University of Norway is 50 years old. This year’s symposium is a part of the program, celebrating the foundation of this university.

This year’s symposium addresses the issues of dilemmas and implications of tourism, and we are impressed by many of the important contributors. The importance and relevance for further development of tourism and hospitality is undisputable. Thank you for sharing your research with us.

We have offered tourism education since 1988 and are also celebrating our 30th anniversary as tourism educators and researchers. We are proud of what we have achieved through these years. Placed in the High North, we have managed to grow and stay relevant in our educational programs and research. Today, we offer tourism education from bachelor degree through to PhD. In this development, we will credit one person in particular: Professor Arvid Viken started our first tourism study program and has been crucial for tourism and hospitality research in Northern Norway, as well as in Norway. He celebrates his 70th birthday during the symposium and we congratulate him.

During the symposium, you will meet 190 delegates from 17 countries. You will listen to three keynote speakers, addressing the symposium theme from various angles. During the intensive two-day program, you have the opportunity to choose between 31 parallel sessions and 156 presentations. You can also participate in workshops.

Alta (Norwegian) or Áltá (Northern Sámi) or Alattio (Kven) is the most populated municipality in Finnmark County. Twenty thousand four hundred and forty-six people live in the municipality. Alta has a large Sámi population and Sámi culture is clearly present all around – even in our cantina. The rock carvings in Alta, located near the Jiepmaluokta bay, dating from c. 4200 BC to 500 BC, are on the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites. The Komsa culture was named after the Komsa Mountain in Alta municipality, where the first archaeological remains of this culture were discovered. We do not know if these were permanent inhabitants or seasonal migrants, but they must have highly valued this area in their culture.

The nature of Alta attracts many visitors. Being the first harbour in Norway welcoming winter cruise tourists, a new tourism era started in 2009. Today, winter cruises are the most important form of tourism in Alta.

We hope you will enjoy and benefit from the symposium, our fantastic nature, long history and diverse cultures.

Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun

Page 4: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

4

EMERGENCY SERVICES+47 78 45 54 00: EMERGENCY ROOM

113: AMBULANCE 112: POLICE

110: FIRE

Page 5: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

5

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Program overview ......................................................................................................................... 2Welcome ......................................................................................................................................... 3Practical information ..................................................................................................................... 6 WIFI ...................................................................................................................................... 6 Optional northen lights tour ............................................................................................ 6 Arctic Gala Dinner at Sorrisniva ....................................................................................... 6 Venue ................................................................................................................................... 7Keynotes speakers ........................................................................................................................ 8 Carina Ren .......................................................................................................................... 8 Bryan Grimwood ............................................................................................................... 9 Britt Kramvig ...................................................................................................................... 10Workshop descriptions ................................................................................................................ 11 Peer review insights ......................................................................................................... 11 Sámi tourism in the North ............................................................................................... 11 Sound, listening and affect in tourism .......................................................................... 12 Tourism employment: Current challenges and opportunities .................................. 12 The Role of Paradigms in research and teaching: The case of sustainable tourism development ..................................................................................................... 13Symposium program September 24th ....................................................................................... 14Symposium program September 25th ....................................................................................... 14Symposium program September 26th ....................................................................................... 15Parallel sessions I ........................................................................................................................ 16Parallel sessions II ....................................................................................................................... 17Workshop overview September 25th ......................................................................................... 18Parallel sessions III ...................................................................................................................... 19Parallel sessions IV ..................................................................................................................... 20Parallel sessions V ....................................................................................................................... 21Parallel sessions VI ...................................................................................................................... 22Symposium participants .............................................................................................................. 23

Page 6: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

6

PRACTICAL INFORMATIONWIFI: Network: uit-conferencePassword: arctic2017

ALTA

About the arrival: The airport is 3km away from the venue and the city center. There is an airport bus on some arrivals. Please see www.snelandia.no/planleggreisen and search for Alta lufthavn to Alta sentrum. There is also a taxi stand outside the arrival hall, and the cost will be approximately NOK 200,-.

OPTIONAL NORTHERN LIGHTS TOURFor those who have signed up for this tour, please bring warm clothing and sensible/warm shoes. we recommend checking out the weather report at www.yr.no.Depature wil be from entrance west (1), at 2030.

If you have not signed up, it might be possible to do this shortly before the departure.

SWIMMING POOLSwimming poolAccess to an indoor swimming pool at Nordlysbadet, located in the city center right next to the Northern Lights Cathedral.

THE ARCTIC GALA DINNER AT SORRISNIVA TUESDAY 25TH

Locally sourced food and a warm atmosphere – the perfect recipe for a pleasant dining experience.

Sorrisniva is a year-round adventure and food business located on the banks of the Alta River, located 20 minutes from the city center of Alta.

The Arctic kitchen follows the food calendar and the dishes represent the seasons at its highest quality. The menu is composed of the finest ingredients that Northern Norway offers. Game/wild meat from Kautokeino, Karasjok and Tana, fish from Lopphavet, Sørøya and the Altafjord, potatoes from local farms, top quality vegetables and local berries that Sorrisniva harvest themselves.

Dress code: Smart casualTransportation: The bus leaves from the parking lot outside of Scandic Alta at 19.00, next to the Northen Lights Cathedral (see map on page 4). Expected return around 23.30.

Page 7: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

7

Most rooms are located on the first floor (map above) whilst two of the rooms are on the second floor by Glassgata (4) (map below).

VENUEInfo-desk/registration: UiT The Arctic University of Norway, campus Alta.Campus Alta is located near the city centre, approximately a 10 minutes walk from Scandic Alta and Thon Hotel Alta, and five minutes from Nyland student accomodation. There will be signs, showing the way to the venue from these accomodations. If you are staying at any other accomodations, please ask for directions.

• Monday 24th 17.00-21.00 – Main entrance (2)• Tuesday 25th 08.30-17.30 – Main entrance (2)• Wednesday 26th 08.30-17.30 – Main entrance (2)

The keynotes will take place in Kultursalen/E102 (3). The parallel sessions will take place in 1087 (4), Kultursalen/E102 (3), 1068 (5), Magerøya/A103 (6), Brattholmen/A105 (7), Stjernøya/A104 (8), Seiland/A203 (9) and Loppa/A204 (10).

Page 8: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

8

Carina RenAssociate professor The Tourism Research Unit at Aalborg University

KEYNOTES SPEAKERS

Tourism trouble: On researching and caring for messy tourism

As proposed under the heading of this conference, tourism is a phenomenon and activity impregnated with challenges, dilemmas and controversies. It is a messy object, which leads itself poorly to easy solutions and quick fixes. Tourism is complex, unruly and not always easily cared for. The growing work within relational and material semiotic studies in tourism has enabled us to think anew about tourism as entangled into our everyday lives and the social. It has also shown us that tourism is enacted through and with non-human actors of all sorts on a planetary scale. As argued by Donna Haraway we as critters are in this world together. This entails the necessity to ‘stay with the trouble’ and hereby to work together to craft liveable, albeit frictious ways of cohabitation.

But the question is how we as researchers can ‘stay with the trouble’ in tourism. In this talk, I will propose different strategies for researching tourism trouble as we stand confronted with the messy object of tourism. What characterizes these efforts is their use of critical proximity rather than critical distance as a tool for world making and for mattering. The hope is that such ways of knowing tourism in modest, tinkering and often collaborative ways can carve out new trajectories for tourism scholars to study and engage with tourism with a new criticality of care.

Carina Ren is ethnologist and researches how tourism interferes with other fields of the social through cultural innovation and explores new ways in which tourism is developed, organised and valued. Through ethnographic, design and digital approaches, she explores different practices and processes of cultural innovation, the performance of branding and value-creation through events. Her research often takes place in research collaborations with tourism organisations and industry, communities and students. She is the co-editor of Actor-Network Theory and Tourism (2012), Tourism Encounters and Controversies. Ontological Politics of Tourism Development (2015) and recently Co-Creating Tourism Research. Towards Collaborative Ways of Knowing (2017).

Page 9: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

9

Bryan GrimwoodAssociate ProfessorDepartment of Recreation and Leisure Studies at the University of Waterloo

Unsettling responsibilities in Arctic tourism

In this presentation, I seek to disrupt settler colonial narratives that permeate meanings and practices of responsibility in Arctic tourism. Settler colonialism represents a set of social power relations that perpetually strive to erase Indigenous societies and title to lands in order to allow for the construction and continuation of a colonial society on the expropriated land base. In Canada—the specific settler colonial context within which my relationship to the Arctic is situated—settler colonialism has steered (and continues to steer) not only state policy directions and development regimes, but also taken-for-granted nation-making narratives that essentialize and silence Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and relating to land. The power of these narratives is tethered to their invisibility, often as common-sense ways of “doing good” or “being responsible”, coupled with their denial of any violence being done. Arctic tourism, I argue, is an especially potent social force through which settler colonial narratives are perpetuated. Drawing on narrative methodology and community-based field research in the Canadian Subarctic, I begin by locating settler stories that move through responsibilities associated with, enacted within, Arctic tourism. Next, working from the premise that resisting settler colonialism necessitates fostering practices, knowledges, and life stories grounded elsewhere, I illuminate Indigenous community narratives of responsibility relating to sacred ancestral lands. My interpretations take aim at piercing the power and invisibility of settler colonial relations in tourism, troubling the stories settlers tell, and assembling new narratives of settler responsibility within Arctic tourism and Arctic tourism research. If storied and performed beyond conventional industry-oriented discourses, Arctic tourism might just enable settlers to identify with their responsibilities as beneficiaries of settler colonialism.

Bryan Grimwood is trained as a human geographer and engaged scholar, Bryan’s research focuses on tourism and Indigenous Peoples, tourism ethics and responsibility, northern landscapes, and outdoor education. His research is informed theoretically by relational perspectives of nature and morality, and draws on diverse qualitative methodologies and principles of community-based and participatory research. Bryan is co-editor of the forthcoming book New Moral Natures in Tourism (Routledge) and several special journal issues, including one on tourism moralities and mobilities (Tourist Studies) and care ethics in tourism education (Journal of Teaching in Travel & Tourism). Bryan sits on the editorial boards of Leisure Sciences and The Journal of Ecotourism, and co-chairs the North American chapter of the Critical Tourism Studies network.

KEYNOTES SPEAKERS

Page 10: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

10

Britt KramvigProfessorDepartment for Tourism and Northern Studies at UiT The Arctic University of Norway

Turbulent indigenous objects: Controversies around cultural appropriation and tourist activity

As the focus of this conference indicates, tourism involves multiple actors and interests. This paper addresses controversies surrounding the use and misuse of Sámi objects and Sámi cultural practices in Tourism. In Sápmi, as in other countries with indigenous populations, disputes arise on issues of cultural appropriation. These disputes are played out in public spaces and via social media. They include questions of how, by whom and under what circumstances traditional Sámi objects and cultural practices are made use of.

Tensions result between colonialism on the one hand and tourism that disadvantages indigenous populations seeking to engage in tourism on their own terms on the other. In much international academic debate, these tensions are addressed by designing research projects in line with indigenous methodologies. Indigenous methodologies aim to acknowledge multiple epistemic authorities. They highlight that we, as researchers, participate in collective knowledge communities. The question for indigenous tourist studies is therefore how to participate with care and responsibility to build knowledge in collaboration with, but not on, communities.

Britt Kramvig’s current core area of interest is the entanglement between indigenous Arctic people’s ontologies, politics, business and multiple ways of knowing. Another major interest is the specificity of (Arctic) creativity, tourism and innovation policy where she also has served as an advisor through position in multiple business initiatives, boards and programs. Britt has researched and published on the assemblages of creativity, art, science and innovation as part of sustainability in contemporary communities. Her current research projects encompass the ongoing politic and practice of reconciliation in Arctic Communities, imaginaries of Arctic futures, and the material turn in social science. Britt regularly contributes to the public debate in national and regional newspapers, through film documentary projects for TV & festivals and as an active participator in many art/science project, among the latest Dark Ecology & SALT. Britt is a research partner at the Centre of Excellence: Resource Extraction and Sustainable Arctic Communities, REXSAC lead by Prof. Sverker Sörlin from KTH, Sweden.

KEYNOTES SPEAKERS

Page 11: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

11

WORKSHOPS

Peer review insights

Judy Mielke

Room: Kultursalen (E102)Time: 14.40-15.10

Publishing in peer-reviewed academic journals is a crucial element for dissemination of knowledge and academic assessment. While we are familiar with academic journals, what is less known is the “behind the scenes” elements, including how journals operate and how to decide which is the right journal to publish one´s scholarly work. Judy Mielke, Publisher at Taylor & Francis, which publishes the Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism, will provide insights to peer review and guidance on how to identify the right journal to publish your next research paper.

Sámi tourism in the North

Hilde Bjørkli, Arvid Viken, Dieter Müller, Bynhild Granås, Ellinor Utsi, Siv Selnes Sara & Nina Smedseng

Room: Brattholmen (A105)Time: 15.25-17.25

This workshop offers the possibility to enter into dialog with Sámi tourist providers in the project Johtit. The Sámi culture has always been an important differentiating aspect of the marketing of Northern Norway. The culture is mostly presented as pre-modern heritage, represented by the reindeer herding lifestyle. This “exotification” of the Sámis as a traditional, harmonious people living in close connection to nature – in contrast to the modern Western culture - has remained from the early birth of Arctic tourism.

Contemporary Sámi culture is a modern culture in every aspect, but in a Sámi way. This is a challenge for the tourism industry, as the “lack of Sáminess” in the real life is not consistent with the marketing images.

This workshop aims to identify the dilemmas of authenticity, marketing and sustainability in heritage tourism, hereby represented through the Sámi culture.

Points of discussion: • As part of a modern world, how can or should Sámi culture and society be presented

for tourists? What are the elements of a modern Sámi life that is of interest for tourist? Do we have to expose former life and traditions (the Sámi emblems) to catch the tourists’ interests?

• As a modern culture and destination, how can Sámi tourism providers cope with the authenticity issue?

• In which way is the marketing of Sámi heritage a premise for Sámi tourism providers in their presentations? How does the marketing influence the products offered from the providers?

Page 12: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

12

Sound, listening and affect in tourism

Mads Bødker & Ana Maria Munar

Room: Loppa (A204)Time: 15.25-17.25

Sounds and acoustic qualities play a crucial role in forming the experience of places, but both practitioners and academics seem have a difficult time articulating how sound plays a role in the experience of places. What feelings, moods, or atmospheres does sound contribute to, and what approaches might be useful for capture and analysis of sound?

This workshop aims to broadly sensitize the participants to the sonorous qualities of the environment. Through practical, collaborative sound recording exercises, the participants are invited to reflect on what sounds can do, how sounds may invoke excitement, relaxa-tion, stress, energy, a sense of history, or any other ‘modulation’ of a sense of place. We ask broadly how sounds give shape to places and the felt sense of ‘being there’. Concurrently, we ask how we might develop richer vocabularies and tactics around otherwise ephemeral, fleeting phenomena of sounds, place and listening, and how a scholarly engagement might play out if sound recordings and listening are primary sources of data.

Due to equipment, a maximum of 25 people can attend. Please register in the info-desk.

Tourism employment: Current challenges and opportunities

Marianne Ekonen, Magnfríður Júlíusdóttir, Gunnar Thór Jóhannesson,Guðrún Þóra Gunnarsdóttir, Katrín Anna Lund & Andreas Walmsley

Room: Kultursalen (E102)Time: 15.25-17.25

The aim of the session is to explore current issues surrounding employment in the tourism and hospitality sectors. Tourism employment is characterised by a number of paradoxes such as that between attestations of employee importance to service quality on the one hand and low wages on the other, between criticisms of tourism as a poor employer and perceptions of tourism employment as glamorous, between characterisation of low skills while many tourism jobs demand high levels of emotional and aesthetic labour. These are just some of the underlying paradoxes that could be explored in this session with a specific focus on how they are reflected within a Nordic context, e.g. Iceland’s experience of rapid tourism growth and fears around precarious employment, or Nordic models of the welfare system, which may impact perceptions of low paid tourism work.

As the anticipated outcomes are a creation and sharing of knowledge, the session will offer both traditional papers as well as interactive sessions to explore collaborative opportunities, discuss theoretical frameworks and a draft outline summary working paper of key insights, which can then be shared with the wider academic community.

WORKSHOPS

Page 13: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

13

The role of paradigms in research and teaching: The case of sustainable tourism development

Dorothee Bohn & Cecilia De Bernardi

Room: 1087Time: 15.25-17.25

The study of research paradigms, understood as certain worldviews that entail ontological, epistemological, methodological and axiological premises, has much to offer for tourism scholarship. Each paradigm allows for approaching tourism phenomena from a different angle and provides guidance for maintaining the coherence in a research project. Studying paradigms renders also insights into the evolving body of knowledge shared by an academic community. Yet, paradigms are infrequently and often inconsistently employed within tourism research.

In the session, we will elaborate together a well-known theme in tourism studies, namely sustainable tourism development, from different paradigmatic positions. On the one hand, the objectives are to increase the knowledge of paradigms and to encourage the use of paradigmatic reflections while on the other, we hope to create a platform in which we can share our ideas in a fruitful way so that we can learn from each other. To prepare for this workshop, participants can ponder beforehand on paradigmatic issues informing their own research projects.

WORKSHOPS

Page 14: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

14

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM SEPTEMBER 24TH

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM SEPTEMBER 25TH

08.30 - 09.00 Kultursalen: Opening of symposium

09.00 - 09.45 Kultursalen: Carina Ren – Tourism trouble: On researching

and caring for messy tourism

09.45 - 10.30 Kultursalen: Bryan Grimwood – Unsettling responsibilities in Arctic tourism

10.30 - 10.50 Glassgata: Refreshments

10.50 - 12.10 PARALLEL SESSIONS I

12.10 - 13.40 Scandic Hotel: Lunch (10 minutes walk from Campus Alta. See map).

13.40 - 15.00 PARALLEL SESSIONS II

14.40 - 15.10 WORKSHOP

15.00 - 15.25 Glassgata: Refreshments

15.25 - 17.25 WORKSHOPS

19.00 Parking lot Scandic Hotel: Departure Arctic Gala Dinner. See map.

19.30 - 23.30 Sorrisniva: Arctic Gala Dinner

09.00 - 17.00 Optional full-day excursion

13.30 - 17.00 Optional half-day excursion

17.00 - 21.00 Main entrance: Registration

18.00 - 21.00 Glassgata/Kantina: Reception

20.30 - 00.30 Northern lights tour. See practical information

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM SEPTEMBER 24TH

Page 15: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

15

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM SEPTEMBER 26TH

08.30 - 09.15 Kultursalen: Brit Kramvig – Turbulent indigenous objects: Controversies around cultural appropriation and tourist activity

09.15 - 09.30 Practical information

09.30 - 09.50 Glassgata: Refreshments

09.50 - 11.10 PARALLEL SESSIONS III

11.10 - 12.35 Scandic Hotel: Lunch (10 minutes walk from Campus Alta. See map).

12.35 - 13.55 PARALLEL SESSIONS IV

13.55 - 14.15 Glassgata: Refreshments

14.15 - 15.35 PARALLEL SESSIONS V

15.35 - 15.50 Break

15.50 - 17.10 PARALLEL SESSIONS VI

17.10 - 17.25 Closure

Page 16: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

16

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

I, 10

50-1

210

- TU

ESD

AY 2

5 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN

(E10

2)

Sess

ion:

12: S

usta

inab

le

beha

viou

r in

tour

ism

&

hos

pita

lity.

20: C

o-cr

eatio

nal m

etho

d-ol

ogie

s in

tour

ism

: To

war

ds c

olla

bora

tive

way

s of

kno

win

g.

30: F

ood

tour

ism

: A

nexu

s be

twee

n au

then

ticity

and

co

mm

erci

aliz

atio

n.

13: L

imits

to

degr

owth

? D

ilem

mas

in to

ur-

ism

and

deg

row

th

in N

ordi

c co

untr

ies.

32: O

ther

them

es.

31: G

ende

r in

to

uris

m.

24: B

uild

ing

shar

ed

know

ledg

e fo

r to

uris

m

deve

lopm

ent.

Chai

r:Sa

rah

Seid

elCa

rina

Ren

, Gun

nar

Thór

hann

esso

n &

Br

itt K

ram

vig

Grz

egor

z Kw

iatk

owsk

&

Hel

ene

Mar

istu

enJu

ndan

Zha

ngYo

ung-

Sook

Lee

Bent

e H

eim

tun

Seija

Tuu

lent

ie

& A

rvid

Vik

en

1050

1110

The

role

of c

onve

n-ie

nce

in s

usta

inab

le

cons

umpt

ion

prac

tices

. By

Bian

ca

Koro

sche

tz, C

ecili

a So

lér &

Ben

jam

in

Har

tman

n

Crea

ting

know

ledg

e –

gene

ratin

g re

aliti

es: T

he

colla

bora

tive

chal

leng

e.

By C

arin

a Re

n, G

unna

r Thó

r Jó

hann

esso

n &

René

van

der

Dui

m

Rura

l res

taur

ants

and

th

eir

cust

omer

s:

Und

erst

andi

ng lo

cal f

ood

as a

par

t of t

he

expe

rien

ce e

cono

my.

By

Elis

abet

Lju

nggr

en, E

va

N. H

øber

g, M

arie

ll Jø

rsta

d &

Ingr

id R

oald

sen

Esta

blis

hmen

t of a

su

stai

nabl

e fu

ture

: D

e-gr

owth

pol

icie

s in

Tou

rism

. By

Ruh

et G

enc

The

why

s or

why

not

s of

vis

iting

a p

lace

: In

form

atio

n se

arch

at

hom

e an

d en

rou

te.

By L

ena

Eski

lsso

n,

Mar

ia M

ånss

on &

M

alin

Zill

inge

r

The

deve

lopm

ent o

f al

pine

ski

tour

ism

in

Sw

eden

from

a

gend

er p

ersp

ectiv

e: A

te

ntat

ive

anal

ysis

of

the

mov

ies

Snow

ro

ller

and

Forc

e M

ajeu

r. B

y Aa

ge

Radm

ann

& S

usan

na

Hed

enbo

rg

Reco

ncili

ng te

nsio

ns in

kn

owle

dge

shar

ing

on

natu

ral r

esou

rce

gove

rnan

ce in

Irel

and’

s pe

riph

eral

wes

t.

By O

rlagh

Rey

nold

s

& Jo

hn M

cDon

agh

1110

1130

Sust

aina

bilit

y as

at

trac

tion:

How

m

unda

ne p

lace

s an

d pr

actic

es b

ecom

e to

uris

t att

ract

ions

in

Scan

dina

via.

By

Mat

ias

T. Jø

rgen

sen

Co-c

reat

ion

met

hodo

logi

es

for

stud

ents

’ em

ploy

abili

ty

in th

e fo

od s

ecto

r: S

ome

evid

ence

from

the

FO

OD

biz

proj

ect.

By

Chi

ara

Rina

ldi,

Eva

Mar

ia

Jern

sand

& L

ena

Mos

sber

g

Food

tour

ism

: The

nex

us

betw

een

auth

entic

ity

and

com

mer

cial

izat

ion.

By

Grz

egor

z Kw

iatk

owsk

i, H

elen

e M

aris

tuen

& O

ve

Okl

evik

Inno

vativ

e en

tre-

pren

eurs

hip

in

nort

hern

Sw

eden

: O

nly

for

grow

ths

sake

?

By Ju

ndan

Zha

ng &

Li

nda

Lund

mar

k

Mak

e ro

om fo

r va

lue

no-c

reat

ion:

Bey

ond

valu

e co

-cre

atio

n an

d co

des

truc

tion.

By

Ero

se S

thap

it &

Pe

ter B

jörk

Man

catio

ns: ‘

Doi

ng’

mal

e fr

iend

ship

s an

d m

ascu

line

iden

titie

s.

By B

odil

Blic

hfel

dt &

Lu

igi D

’Am

bros

io

You

mig

ht n

ot li

ke th

e pr

ojec

t but

you

hav

e to

re

spec

t the

guy

: Vir

tues

as

part

of e

ntre

pren

eurs

hip

in to

uris

m a

nd

extr

activ

e in

dust

ries

. By

Gau

te S

vens

son

1130

1150

Gre

en c

onsu

mpt

ion

impl

icat

ions

for

sust

aina

ble

tour

ism

. By

Kat

arzy

na N

egac

z

Gas

tron

omy

as s

usta

inab

le

tour

ism

dev

elop

men

t of

peri

pher

al d

estin

atio

ns:

Trip

le h

elix

as

a dr

iver

. By

Jon

Sund

bo &

Don

na S

undb

o

The

ordi

nary

of t

he e

x-tr

aord

inar

y fo

od e

xper

i-en

ces.

By

San

dhiy

a G

oola

up

Deg

row

ing

tour

ism

: M

ulti-

scal

ar s

trat

e-gi

es a

nd fa

ilure

s. B

y C.

Mic

hael

Hal

l

The

Auss

ie to

uris

t W

ave.

By

Rich

ard

Robi

nson

Mid

life

sing

le w

om-

en’s

holid

ays

and

filia

l du

ty.

By B

ente

Hei

mtu

n

Tour

ism

at N

orth

Ca

pe –

mon

opol

y, im

peri

-al

ism

or

mar

ket e

cono

my

in p

ract

ice:

A m

oral

co

ncer

n. B

y Ar

vid

Vike

n

1150

1210

The

mos

t im

port

ant

aspe

cts

of s

usta

in-

abili

ty in

mar

ketin

g of

Fin

nish

hol

iday

vi

lla fo

r Fi

nnis

h an

d Ru

ssia

n co

nsum

ers.

By

Kat

ja P

asan

en

Knitt

ing

and

purl

ing

care

: En

tang

led

stor

ies

of g

reen

-an

d-w

hite

mitt

ens.

By

Out

i Kug

api

& E

mily

Höc

kert

Food

and

mea

ls in

Nor

-w

ay: W

hat i

s In

stag

ram

sa

ying

?

By K

ai V

icto

r Han

sen

‘Am

bigu

ity w

ork’

in

lifes

tyle

ent

repr

e-ne

ursh

ip. B

y Er

ika

Ande

rsso

n

Cede

rhol

m

WW

OO

Fers

, ‘W

anna

bes’

and

“WW

OO

Fers

’ lig

ht”

in N

orw

ay. B

y Re

idar

J.

Myk

letu

n, In

gebo

rg

Nor

dbø

&

Món

ica

S. P

érez

Rura

l gen

der

re-c

onst

ruct

ions

in

tour

ism

in p

erip

hera

l N

ordi

c ar

eas.

By

Susa

nna

Hel

dt C

asse

l

The

map

ping

of

expe

rien

ce-b

ased

kn

owle

dge

in to

uris

m

plan

ning

: Cas

es fr

om

Finn

ish

Lapl

and.

By

Seija

Tu

ulen

tie, A

ri N

ikul

a, S

ini

Kant

ola,

Mar

ja U

usita

lo &

Ve

sa N

ival

a

Page 17: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

17

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

I, 10

50-1

210

- TU

ESD

AY 2

5 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN

(E10

2)

Sess

ion:

12: S

usta

inab

le

beha

viou

r in

tour

ism

&

hos

pita

lity.

20: C

o-cr

eatio

nal m

etho

d-ol

ogie

s in

tour

ism

: To

war

ds c

olla

bora

tive

way

s of

kno

win

g.

30: F

ood

tour

ism

: A

nexu

s be

twee

n au

then

ticity

and

co

mm

erci

aliz

atio

n.

13: L

imits

to

degr

owth

? D

ilem

mas

in to

ur-

ism

and

deg

row

th

in N

ordi

c co

untr

ies.

32: O

ther

them

es.

31: G

ende

r in

to

uris

m.

24: B

uild

ing

shar

ed

know

ledg

e fo

r to

uris

m

deve

lopm

ent.

Chai

r:Sa

rah

Seid

elCa

rina

Ren

, Gun

nar

Thór

hann

esso

n &

Br

itt K

ram

vig

Grz

egor

z Kw

iatk

owsk

&

Hel

ene

Mar

istu

enJu

ndan

Zha

ngYo

ung-

Sook

Lee

Bent

e H

eim

tun

Seija

Tuu

lent

ie

& A

rvid

Vik

en

1050

1110

The

role

of c

onve

n-ie

nce

in s

usta

inab

le

cons

umpt

ion

prac

tices

. By

Bian

ca

Koro

sche

tz, C

ecili

a So

lér &

Ben

jam

in

Har

tman

n

Crea

ting

know

ledg

e –

gene

ratin

g re

aliti

es: T

he

colla

bora

tive

chal

leng

e.

By C

arin

a Re

n, G

unna

r Thó

r Jó

hann

esso

n &

René

van

der

Dui

m

Rura

l res

taur

ants

and

th

eir

cust

omer

s:

Und

erst

andi

ng lo

cal f

ood

as a

par

t of t

he

expe

rien

ce e

cono

my.

By

Elis

abet

Lju

nggr

en, E

va

N. H

øber

g, M

arie

ll Jø

rsta

d &

Ingr

id R

oald

sen

Esta

blis

hmen

t of a

su

stai

nabl

e fu

ture

: D

e-gr

owth

pol

icie

s in

Tou

rism

. By

Ruh

et G

enc

The

why

s or

why

not

s of

vis

iting

a p

lace

: In

form

atio

n se

arch

at

hom

e an

d en

rou

te.

By L

ena

Eski

lsso

n,

Mar

ia M

ånss

on &

M

alin

Zill

inge

r

The

deve

lopm

ent o

f al

pine

ski

tour

ism

in

Sw

eden

from

a

gend

er p

ersp

ectiv

e: A

te

ntat

ive

anal

ysis

of

the

mov

ies

Snow

ro

ller

and

Forc

e M

ajeu

r. B

y Aa

ge

Radm

ann

& S

usan

na

Hed

enbo

rg

Reco

ncili

ng te

nsio

ns in

kn

owle

dge

shar

ing

on

natu

ral r

esou

rce

gove

rnan

ce in

Irel

and’

s pe

riph

eral

wes

t.

By O

rlagh

Rey

nold

s

& Jo

hn M

cDon

agh

1110

1130

Sust

aina

bilit

y as

at

trac

tion:

How

m

unda

ne p

lace

s an

d pr

actic

es b

ecom

e to

uris

t att

ract

ions

in

Scan

dina

via.

By

Mat

ias

T. Jø

rgen

sen

Co-c

reat

ion

met

hodo

logi

es

for

stud

ents

’ em

ploy

abili

ty

in th

e fo

od s

ecto

r: S

ome

evid

ence

from

the

FO

OD

biz

proj

ect.

By

Chi

ara

Rina

ldi,

Eva

Mar

ia

Jern

sand

& L

ena

Mos

sber

g

Food

tour

ism

: The

nex

us

betw

een

auth

entic

ity

and

com

mer

cial

izat

ion.

By

Grz

egor

z Kw

iatk

owsk

i, H

elen

e M

aris

tuen

& O

ve

Okl

evik

Inno

vativ

e en

tre-

pren

eurs

hip

in

nort

hern

Sw

eden

: O

nly

for

grow

ths

sake

?

By Ju

ndan

Zha

ng &

Li

nda

Lund

mar

k

Mak

e ro

om fo

r va

lue

no-c

reat

ion:

Bey

ond

valu

e co

-cre

atio

n an

d co

des

truc

tion.

By

Ero

se S

thap

it &

Pe

ter B

jörk

Man

catio

ns: ‘

Doi

ng’

mal

e fr

iend

ship

s an

d m

ascu

line

iden

titie

s.

By B

odil

Blic

hfel

dt &

Lu

igi D

’Am

bros

io

You

mig

ht n

ot li

ke th

e pr

ojec

t but

you

hav

e to

re

spec

t the

guy

: Vir

tues

as

part

of e

ntre

pren

eurs

hip

in to

uris

m a

nd

extr

activ

e in

dust

ries

. By

Gau

te S

vens

son

1130

1150

Gre

en c

onsu

mpt

ion

impl

icat

ions

for

sust

aina

ble

tour

ism

. By

Kat

arzy

na N

egac

z

Gas

tron

omy

as s

usta

inab

le

tour

ism

dev

elop

men

t of

peri

pher

al d

estin

atio

ns:

Trip

le h

elix

as

a dr

iver

. By

Jon

Sund

bo &

Don

na S

undb

o

The

ordi

nary

of t

he e

x-tr

aord

inar

y fo

od e

xper

i-en

ces.

By

San

dhiy

a G

oola

up

Deg

row

ing

tour

ism

: M

ulti-

scal

ar s

trat

e-gi

es a

nd fa

ilure

s. B

y C.

Mic

hael

Hal

l

The

Auss

ie to

uris

t W

ave.

By

Rich

ard

Robi

nson

Mid

life

sing

le w

om-

en’s

holid

ays

and

filia

l du

ty.

By B

ente

Hei

mtu

n

Tour

ism

at N

orth

Ca

pe –

mon

opol

y, im

peri

-al

ism

or

mar

ket e

cono

my

in p

ract

ice:

A m

oral

co

ncer

n. B

y Ar

vid

Vike

n

1150

1210

The

mos

t im

port

ant

aspe

cts

of s

usta

in-

abili

ty in

mar

ketin

g of

Fin

nish

hol

iday

vi

lla fo

r Fi

nnis

h an

d Ru

ssia

n co

nsum

ers.

By

Kat

ja P

asan

en

Knitt

ing

and

purl

ing

care

: En

tang

led

stor

ies

of g

reen

-an

d-w

hite

mitt

ens.

By

Out

i Kug

api

& E

mily

Höc

kert

Food

and

mea

ls in

Nor

-w

ay: W

hat i

s In

stag

ram

sa

ying

?

By K

ai V

icto

r Han

sen

‘Am

bigu

ity w

ork’

in

lifes

tyle

ent

repr

e-ne

ursh

ip. B

y Er

ika

Ande

rsso

n

Cede

rhol

m

WW

OO

Fers

, ‘W

anna

bes’

and

“WW

OO

Fers

’ lig

ht”

in N

orw

ay. B

y Re

idar

J.

Myk

letu

n, In

gebo

rg

Nor

dbø

&

Món

ica

S. P

érez

Rura

l gen

der

re-c

onst

ruct

ions

in

tour

ism

in p

erip

hera

l N

ordi

c ar

eas.

By

Susa

nna

Hel

dt C

asse

l

The

map

ping

of

expe

rien

ce-b

ased

kn

owle

dge

in to

uris

m

plan

ning

: Cas

es fr

om

Finn

ish

Lapl

and.

By

Seija

Tu

ulen

tie, A

ri N

ikul

a, S

ini

Kant

ola,

Mar

ja U

usita

lo &

Ve

sa N

ival

a

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

II, 1

340-

1500

- TU

ESD

AY 2

5 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)ST

JERN

ØYA

(A

104)

Sess

ion:

12: S

usta

inab

le

beha

viou

r in

tour

ism

an

d ho

spita

lity.

20: C

o-cr

eatio

nal m

etho

d-ol

ogie

s in

tour

ism

: To

war

ds c

olla

bora

tive

way

s of

kno

win

g.

11: S

usta

inab

le T

ouri

sm

Gro

wth

in th

e N

ordi

c Co

untr

ies.

26: T

ouri

sm in

co

asta

l and

mar

ine

envi

ronm

ents

.32

: Oth

er th

emes

.

3: C

ity to

uris

m:

Dile

mm

as a

nd

impl

icat

ions

in

dest

inat

ion

deve

lopm

ent.

17: C

ondu

ctin

g hi

gh

qual

ity to

uris

m a

nd

hosp

italit

y re

sear

ch:

Refle

ctio

ns a

nd

dem

onst

ratio

ns o

f met

h-od

olog

ical

app

roac

hes.

Chai

r:Sa

rah

Seid

elCa

rina

Ren

, Gun

nar

Thór

hann

esso

n &

Br

itt K

ram

vig

Sigb

jørn

Tve

tera

asSa

nna-

Mar

i Ren

fors

&

Jaan

a Ru

oho

Arild

Røk

enes

Gör

an A

nder

sson

Trud

e Fu

rnes

& Je

ns K

. S.

Jaco

bsen

13.4

014

.00

The

role

of g

uide

s an

d th

eir

cont

ribu

-tio

n to

nat

ure

cons

erva

tion.

By

Anna

V. E

inar

sdót

tir &

G

uðrú

n H

elga

dótti

r

Co-c

reat

ion

of k

now

ledg

e:

Tran

slat

ing

subj

ectiv

ities

, vi

sual

ities

and

aut

hori

sed

know

ledg

e. B

y Cl

audi

a Eg

er

Mov

ing

tow

ards

su

stai

nabl

e gr

owth

: Re

visi

ting

the

10 p

ilot

sche

me

proj

ects

. By

Ida

Mar

ie V

. And

erse

n &

Bod

il S.

Blic

hfel

dt

The

unsu

stai

nabi

lity

of c

ruis

e to

uris

m.

By S

vein

Lar

sen,

Ka

thar

ina

Wol

ff,

Eina

r Mar

nbur

g ,

Torv

ald

Øga

ard

The

Balti

c Se

a re

gion

an

d ot

her

blan

k sp

aces

. Sw

edis

h to

uris

m in

dust

ry

narr

ativ

es: A

ge

ogra

phy

in m

akin

g.

By C

hris

tian

Wid

holm

A st

akeh

olde

r an

alys

is o

f Le

euw

arde

n Fr

yslâ

n as

Eur

opea

n Ca

pita

l of

Cul

ture

201

8. B

y Kl

aes

Erin

ga &

Ole

ksii

Khre

btiie

vsky

i

Dis

cret

e ch

oice

exp

eri-

men

ts in

nat

ure-

base

d to

uris

m a

nd o

utdo

or

recr

eatio

n: A

sys

tem

atic

qu

antit

ativ

e re

view

. By

Kath

rin Ja

the

14.0

014

.20

Mar

ket s

egm

en-

tatio

n in

tour

ism

: D

estin

atio

ns in

the

Nor

dic

peri

pher

y an

d re

spon

sibl

e to

uris

ts.

By B

rynj

ar T

hor T

hor-

stei

nsso

n, E

inar

Sva

ns-

son

& K

ari J

oens

en

How

to a

lgor

ithm

and

cu

rate

“the

ulti

mat

e ex

peri

ence

”? B

y Ki

rsti

Mat

hies

en H

jem

dahl

, Dan

iel

Nor

dgår

d, E

rik W

ästlu

nd &

To

r Hel

ge A

as

Swed

ish

tour

ism

in a

ch

angi

ng c

limat

e: A

co

mpr

ehen

sive

res

earc

h ag

enda

. By

Cen

k D

emiro

glu

&

Lind

a Lu

ndm

ark

Dev

elop

ing

stak

e-ho

lder

info

rmed

cu

rric

ulum

in c

osta

l an

d m

ariti

me

tour

ism

: A p

ersp

ec-

tive

from

Fin

land

. By

San

na-M

ari R

en-

fors

& Ja

ana

Ruoh

o

Shop

ping

as

a to

uris

t ac

tivity

: On

mea

ning

cr

eatio

n an

d th

e sa

lienc

e of

pla

ce.

By L

ucia

Piz

zich

ini &

Er

ik L

undb

erg

Shop

ping

and

su

stai

nabi

lity:

The

ca

se o

f Sto

ckho

lm.

By D

enni

s Za

lam

ans

The

appl

icat

ion

of a

m

ultip

hase

app

roac

h to

ex

plor

e to

uris

ts’ e

xper

i-en

ces

in d

epth

. By

Åsa

Gra

hn

14.2

014

.40

Loca

l foo

d pr

oduc

ts

in to

uris

m: I

nflue

nc-

ing

tour

ists

’ be

havi

our

by te

lling

st

orie

s.

By S

arah

Sei

del

Slow

ing

dow

n in

dige

nous

tr

avel

ling.

By

Brit

t Kra

mvi

g &

Jan

Åge

Rise

th

Sust

aina

ble

valu

e cr

ea-

tion

with

in

busi

ness

mod

els

in

natu

re to

uris

m: E

xplo

ring

th

e un

derl

ying

dri

vers

. By

Sam

ira S

aheb

alza

man

i

Tem

pora

l asp

ects

of

com

mun

icat

ing

met

ocea

n in

for-

mat

ion

for

Arct

ic

mar

ine

tour

ism

. By

Jelm

er Je

urin

g

Pred

ictin

g sa

tisfa

ctio

n w

ith

co-p

rodu

ctio

n: A

sy

stem

atic

rev

iew

an

d m

eta-

anal

ysis

of

feed

back

inte

rven

-tio

n on

con

sum

ers’

satis

fact

ion

with

task

pe

rfor

man

ce. B

y M

ay

I. Fu

rene

s, T

rude

Fur

unes

, O

lga

Gje

rald

, Jo

Røsl

ien

&

Torv

ald

Øga

ard

The

prac

tice

of

targ

etin

g vi

sito

rs to

ur

ban

dest

inat

ions

: A

criti

cal d

iscu

ssio

n of

DM

Os

info

rmat

ion

stra

tegi

es.

By L

ena

Eski

lsso

n,

Mar

ia M

ånss

on &

M

alin

Zill

inge

r

Mea

suri

ng p

erce

ived

ris

k:

How

item

wor

ding

will

in

fluen

ce y

our

findi

ngs.

By

Kat

harin

a W

olff

& S

vein

La

rsen

14.4

015

.00

Colla

bora

tive

geom

edia

re

sear

ch m

etho

dolo

gies

. By

Lot

ta B

raun

erhi

elm

, Li

nda

Ryan

Ben

gtss

on

& L

aila

Gib

son

Urb

aniz

atio

n de

gree

and

su

rviv

al o

f tou

rism

firm

s.

By U

rsul

a La

ndaz

uri &

O

ddne

Skr

ede

Mak

ing,

sus

tain

ing

and

shar

ing

rura

lity:

Th

e ro

le o

f fes

tival

s in

rur

al p

lace

-mak

ing.

By

Grz

egor

z Kw

iatk

owsk

i &

Ove

Okl

evik

City

, eth

nici

ty,

dive

rsity

and

the

orig

in o

f Fir

e fe

stiv

al

in S

wed

ish

maj

or

citie

s:

A re

sear

ch id

ea.

By S

aeid

Abb

asia

n

Page 18: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

18

WO

RKSH

OPS

- TU

ESD

AY 2

5 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

MBR

ATTH

OLM

EN (A

105)

LOPP

A (A

204)

KULT

URS

ALEN

(E

102)

1087

KULT

URS

ALEN

(E10

2)

Mod

erat

ors:

Hild

e Bj

ørkl

i, Ar

vid

Vike

n,

Die

ter

Mül

ler,

Ellin

or U

tsi,

Siv

Seln

es S

ara

&

Nin

a Sm

edse

ng

Mad

s Bø

dker

&

Ana

Mar

ia M

unar

Dor

othe

e Bo

hn &

Ce

cilia

De

Bern

ardi

Mar

iann

e Ek

onen

, Mag

nfrí

ður

Júlíu

sdót

tir, G

unna

r Th

ór

Jóha

nnes

son,

Guð

rún

Þóra

G

unna

rsdó

ttir

, Kat

rín

Anna

Lun

d &

And

reas

Wal

msl

ey

Wor

ksho

p 14

.40-

15.1

0Pe

er re

view

insi

ghts

.

Wor

ksho

ps

15.2

5-17

.25

Sám

i tou

rism

in th

e N

orth

.So

und,

list

enin

g an

d aff

ect i

n to

uris

m.

The

role

of p

arad

igm

s in

re

sear

ch a

nd te

achi

ng: T

he

case

of s

usta

inab

le

tour

ism

dev

elop

men

t.

Tour

ism

em

ploy

men

t: Cu

rren

t ch

alle

nges

and

opp

ortu

nitie

s.

Page 19: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

19

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

III, 0

950-

1110

- W

EDN

ESD

AY 2

6 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN (E

102)

STJE

RNØ

YA

(A10

4)

Sess

ion:

2: T

ouri

sm

enco

unte

rs in

the

sub-

arct

ic N

orth

: Im

plic

atio

ns a

nd

dile

mm

as.

18: C

once

ptua

l-iz

atio

ns: B

lurr

ing

the

boun

dari

es o

f to

uris

m p

ract

ices

.

11: S

usta

inab

le to

uris

m

grow

th in

the

Nor

dic

coun

trie

s.

3. C

ity to

uris

m:

Dile

mm

as a

nd

impl

icat

ions

in d

esti-

natio

n de

velo

pmen

t.

9: H

uman

fact

ors

in th

e to

uris

m a

nd h

ospi

talit

y se

rvic

es.

21: A

dvan

ces

in

cont

empo

rary

tour

ism

pu

blic

pol

icy.

22: T

rans

form

ing

dest

inat

ions

: Tou

rism

dy

nam

ics,

go

vern

ance

and

lo

calit

ies

in c

hang

e.

10: S

usta

inab

le

expe

rien

ces

in

tour

ism

.

Chai

r:Be

ate

Burs

ta,

Trin

e Kv

idal

-Røv

ik,

Kjel

l Ols

en &

Out

i Ra

ntal

a

Bryn

hild

Gra

nås,

Ka

trín

Ann

a Lu

nd &

G

unna

r Th

ór

Jóha

nnes

son

Sigb

jørn

Tve

tera

asG

öran

And

erss

onO

lga

Gje

rald

& Å

se

Hel

ene

Bakk

evig

D

agsl

and

Dor

othe

e Bo

hn &

Ceci

lia D

e Be

rnar

diJa

rkko

Saa

rine

n &

Out

i Kul

usjä

rvi

Hog

ne Ø

ian

&

Mon

ika

A. B

reib

y

09.5

010

.10

Enco

unte

ring

to

uris

ts a

nd c

oun-

teri

ng to

uris

m. B

y G

uðrú

n H

elga

dotti

r, G

uðrú

n Þ.

Gun

nars

-do

ttir &

Geo

rget

te

L. B

urns

Vers

atile

tour

ists

: A

case

stu

dy o

f N

orw

egia

n vi

sito

rs

to S

pain

. By

Lei

f Sel

stad

Tour

ists

’ per

cept

ions

of

peop

le d

ensi

ty in

cru

ise

port

s.

By Je

ns K

r. S.

Jaco

bsen

, Nin

a M

. Ive

rsen

& L

eif E

. Hem

The

med

iatiz

ed

tour

ism

city

und

er

terr

or: D

ilem

mas

and

st

rate

gies

for

dest

ina-

tion

man

agem

ent o

r-ga

nisa

tions

. By

Ceci

lia

Cass

inge

r, Jö

rgen

Eks

ell,

Mar

ia M

ånss

on, O

la

Thuf

vess

on

Psyc

hoso

cial

wor

k en

viro

nmen

t in

serv

ice

indu

stri

es.

By O

lga

Gje

rald

&

Trud

e Fu

rune

s

Tour

ism

str

ateg

ies

for

all?

By

Anu

Har

ju-

Myl

lyah

o, S

alla

Jutil

a &

M

aria

Hak

kara

inen

Mod

els

for

tran

sfor

min

g pe

riph

eral

tour

ism

de

stin

atio

ns.

By P

eter

Bjö

rk

Envi

ronm

enta

l Kn

owle

dge

in

entr

epre

neur

ial A

rctic

to

uris

m.

By M

ark

McK

ee

10.1

010

.30

Med

iate

d pl

ace

enco

unte

rs: A

pla

ce

for

me

and

a pl

ace

for

you?

By

Trin

e Kv

idal

-Røv

ik

Wor

ldin

g to

ur-

ism

: res

pons

ible

/re

spon

se-a

ble

rese

arch

pra

ctic

es.

By K

atrín

A. L

und

&

Gun

nar T

. Jóh

anne

s-so

n

The

birt

h of

a to

uris

m

natio

n.

By Ji

nghu

a Xi

e &

Si

gbjø

rn L

. Tve

terå

s

Smar

t city

tour

ist

segm

enta

tion:

How

ca

n as

pect

s of

he

rita

ge e

xper

ienc

e be

use

d in

city

tour

ist

segm

enta

tion?

By

Gör

an A

nder

sson

Visi

tor

expe

rien

ces

and

opin

ions

on

serv

ices

at

Alva

r Aa

lto’s

Expe

rim

enta

l Hou

se.

By A

nne-

Mai

ja

Mal

mis

alo-

Lens

u

The

role

of w

orkf

orce

an

d la

bour

in N

ordi

c to

uris

m s

trat

egie

s.

By D

orot

hee

Bohn

&

Ceci

lia D

e Be

rnar

di

Ove

rtou

rism

and

su

stai

nabi

lity

for

loca

l co

mm

uniti

es.

By T

onje

Kva

m &

An

ne W

. Rya

n

Reso

urce

s fo

r na

ture

-bas

ed to

uris

m

prod

ucts

. By

Knu

t Fo

ssga

rd &

St

ian

Sten

slan

d

10.3

010

.50

Hum

an-a

nim

al

enco

unte

rs in

Nor

-di

c to

uris

m:

A st

udy

of

user

-gen

erat

ed

cont

ent i

n so

cial

m

edia

. By

Jose

C.G

. Ro

sell,

Min

ni H

aan-

pää

& D

omin

ika

Klos

An e

asy

plac

e of

ba

lanc

e. A

daw

ning

sk

i tou

ring

de

stin

atio

n in

Fi

nnm

ark,

Nor

ther

n N

orw

ay: A

pla

ce o

f ba

lanc

e.

By Ju

ne A

. Røs

3. T

rans

natio

nal m

igra

tions

an

d pr

ecar

ious

labo

ur in

th

e to

uris

m in

dust

ry in

the

Nor

weg

ian

Hig

h N

orth

/Arc

-tic

: Com

pari

ng S

valb

ard

and

Sør-

Vara

nger

. By

Aile

en A

. Esp

iritu

City

tour

ism

and

loca

l co

mm

unity

: The

po

wer

to e

ngag

e pe

ople

aro

und

cultu

ral h

erita

ge a

t th

e m

useu

m. T

he c

ase

stud

y of

the

Mar

itim

e M

useu

m o

f Bar

celo

na.

By M

ònic

a M

olin

a

Choo

sing

voc

atio

nal

educ

atio

n fo

r w

ork

in

the

hosp

italit

y se

ctor

: A

thre

e-w

ave

long

itudi

nal

stud

y of

15-

16 y

ear

old

pupi

ls.

By Å

se H

elen

e B.

D

agsl

and

& R

eida

r J.

Myk

letu

n

Enco

urag

ing

colla

bora

tive

cons

erva

-tio

n th

roug

h in

crea

sed

seco

nd h

omeo

wne

r en

gage

men

t: A

case

st

udy

in S

aare

maa

Is

land

, Est

onia

. By

Jana

R. C

ottr

ell

Build

ing

a su

stai

nabl

e to

uris

m b

rand

in th

e pe

riph

ery:

Exp

eri-

ence

s fr

om th

e Sl

ow

Adve

ntur

e in

the

Nor

ther

n Te

rrito

ries

(S

AIN

T) p

roje

ct. B

y D

anie

l Lav

en, T

atia

na

Chek

alin

a, L

usin

e M

arga

ryan

, Pet

er

Varle

y &

Ste

ve T

aylo

r

10.5

011

.10

Wel

com

e to

you

r fin

est n

atur

e: T

he

tour

istic

dis

cour

se

on n

atur

e in

in

form

atio

n m

ater

ials

abo

ut

Swed

ish

natio

nal

park

s. B

y Em

elie

lton

& Jo

han

Hed

rén

Wha

t can

dog

s te

ach

us a

bout

tour

istic

w

orld

mak

ing?

By

Bry

nhild

Gra

nås

Beyo

nd th

e Re

d Sq

uare

: The

Red

O

ctob

er d

istr

ict a

s an

em

ergi

ng p

ost-

indu

stri

al to

uris

t site

, cr

eativ

e cl

uste

r an

d a

glob

al v

illag

e sh

ow-

case

. By

Per S

tröm

berg

&

Ser

gey

Ilkev

ich

Build

ing-

up s

ervi

ce-

driv

en m

arke

t or

ient

atio

n ca

se o

f HI

host

els

in Ic

elan

d.

By M

agnú

s Ás

geirs

son

Pro-

poor

tour

ism

de

stin

atio

n de

velo

p-m

ent a

nd p

rosp

ects

for

pove

rty

redu

ctio

n: A

st

udy

of W

li, G

hana

. By

Ken

nedy

Akr

ong

Sust

aina

bilit

y on

na

ture

-bas

ed g

uide

d to

urs:

A q

uest

for

a su

stai

nabl

e pa

th.

By A

xel R

osen

berg

Page 20: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

20

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

IV, 1

235-

1355

- W

EDN

ESD

AY 2

6 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN (E

102)

STJE

RNØ

YA

(A10

4)

Sess

ion:

2: T

ouri

sm

enco

unte

rs in

the

sub-

arct

ic N

orth

: Im

plic

atio

ns a

nd

dile

mm

as.

1: C

omin

g to

our

se

nses

in to

uris

m?

8: In

nova

tion

and

entr

epre

neur

ship

.

25/2

7: M

ariti

me

tour

-is

m: C

halle

nges

and

op

port

uniti

es

of c

ruis

ing.

9: H

uman

fact

ors

in th

e to

uris

m a

nd h

ospi

talit

y se

rvic

es.

3. C

ity to

uris

m:

Dile

mm

as a

nd

impl

icat

ions

in

dest

inat

ion

deve

lopm

ent.

22: T

rans

form

ing

dest

inat

ions

: Tou

rism

dy

nam

ics,

go

vern

ance

and

lo

calit

ies

in c

hang

e.

10: S

usta

inab

le

expe

rien

ces

in

tour

ism

.

Chai

r:Be

ate

Burs

ta,

Trin

e Kv

idal

-Røv

ik,

Kjel

l Ols

en &

Out

i Ra

ntal

a

Mad

s Bø

dker

& A

na

Mar

ia M

unar

Pete

r Fi

sche

rH

in H

eem

stra

, Pet

er

Hau

gset

h &

Urb

an

Wrå

kber

g

Olg

a G

jera

ld &

Åse

H

elen

e Ba

kkev

ig

Dag

slan

dG

öran

And

erss

onJa

rkko

Saa

rine

n &

O

uti K

ulus

järv

iH

ogne

Øia

n &

M

onik

a A.

Bre

iby

12.3

512

.55

“Wal

k th

e lin

e”:

seas

onal

ity a

nd

bord

er c

ross

ings

at

Arc

tic C

ircl

e la

ndm

arks

: An

ethn

ogra

phic

st

udy

of to

uris

ts’

prac

tices

– c

ase

Rova

niem

i. By

Alix

Va

rnaj

ot

Gui

ding

with

bod

y an

d m

ind

thro

ugh

soun

dsca

pes

of

Arct

ic n

atur

e.

By E

llen

J. Kv

alsv

ik

The

elus

ive

inno

vatio

n ac

tiv-

ity in

tour

ism

. By

Ole

Ber

gese

n, S

igbj

ørn

Tvet

eraa

s &

Jing

hua

Xie

Dev

elop

men

t of

ocea

n cr

uisi

ng in

the

Peop

le’s

Repu

blic

of

Chin

a.

By V

éron

ique

Mon

dou

The

effec

ts o

f lea

der-

ship

sty

le o

n re

stau

rant

em

ploy

ees’

com

mitm

ent t

o se

rvic

e qu

ality

. By

Kla

es E

ringa

&

Mar

ijke

Nic

olai

Resp

onsi

ble

tour

ism

de

velo

pmen

t in

Nor

ther

n N

orw

ay: A

st

udy

of th

e pr

oces

s of

mak

ing

the

city

of

Trom

sø a

sus

tain

able

de

stin

atio

n.

By K

ristin

Lin

dqui

st

Colla

bora

tion

and

soci

al c

apita

l in

rura

l ar

eas:

Tou

rism

as

driv

ing

forc

e fo

r re

sil-

ienc

e.

By C

ecili

a de

Ber

nard

i

Colla

bora

tive

deve

lopm

ent o

f su

stai

nabi

lity

at th

e de

stin

atio

n le

vel.

By K

aarin

a Te

rvo-

Kank

are

12.5

513

.15

Impl

icat

ions

and

di

lem

mas

: Off

erin

g si

tes

and

the

land

-sc

ape:

On

traffi

c-

and

othe

r re

latio

ns

in C

ircu

mpo

lar

Euro

pe.

By K

jell

Ols

en

Des

igni

ng s

ensi

tive

natu

re to

uris

m

arch

itect

ure.

By

Miia

Mäk

inen

&

Out

i Ran

tala

New

dir

ectio

ns fo

r en

trep

rene

urs

with

in n

atur

e ba

sed

busi

ness

: The

ob

stac

les

and

poss

ibili

ties

with

tour

ism

. By

Ann

a Sö

rens

son,

Ann

ika

Caw

thor

n &

Mar

ia B

ogre

n

Are

we

so v

ery

diff

eren

t? C

oncl

usio

ns

of a

Nor

th/S

outh

in

vest

igat

ion

into

the

rece

ivin

g of

cru

ise

ship

s. B

y Tr

acy

Har

kiso

n, Þ

órný

Ba

rðad

óttir

Reap

prai

sal:

A be

nefic

ial e

mot

ion

regu

latio

n st

rate

gy

whe

n fa

cing

job

stre

ssor

s? A

stu

dy o

f ho

tel m

anag

ers’

wel

l-be

ing.

By

Anni

e H

aver

, Es

pen

Ols

en &

Kris

tin

Aker

jord

et

The

role

of M

ICE

in th

e ev

olut

ion

of d

estin

a-tio

ns: F

rom

off

erin

g pl

aces

to g

loba

l go

vern

ance

str

ateg

ies.

By

Hél

ène

Péba

rthe

-D

ésiré

Gui

ded

tour

s an

d em

otio

nal d

esig

n in

U

NES

CO W

orld

H

erita

ge s

ites:

The

ca

se o

f Suo

men

lin-

na F

ortr

ess.

By

Oon

a Si

mol

in

13.1

513

.35

Nor

weg

ian

Scen

ic

Rout

es a

nd lo

cal

influ

ence

: Co

llabo

ratio

n or

co

nsen

t?

By B

eate

Bur

sta

Perc

eptio

n of

the

Arct

ic: W

inte

r re

crea

tion

and

plac

e at

tach

men

t on

Sval

bard

. By

Dor

a B

Aam

ot

Enga

ge o

r av

oid?

How

do

hote

l ow

ners

rel

ate

to a

nd

inte

ract

with

loca

l act

ors

in

rura

l Nor

way

? By

Agn

es B

rudv

ik E

nges

et &

Ka

rolin

e D

augs

tad

Crui

sing

tour

ism

as

a pa

th to

a s

usta

inab

le

futu

re?

The

ethn

ogra

phic

cas

e of

a

new

cru

isin

g qu

ay

on G

otla

nd, S

wed

en.

By U

lrika

Per

sson

-Fi

schi

er

Asym

met

ric

effec

ts o

f st

aff m

ism

atch

on

long

ru

n te

chni

cal e

ffici

ency

: A

Baye

sian

app

roac

h.

By F

ikru

Ale

may

ehu

&

Sigb

jørn

Tve

terå

s

Loca

l tou

rism

age

ncy

in

dest

inat

ion

chan

ge: A

po

stst

ruct

ural

pol

itica

l ec

onom

ic v

iew

. By

Out

i Kul

usjä

rvi

Sust

aina

bilit

y an

d ex

peri

entia

l val

ues

on to

uris

m d

estin

a-tio

ns.

By M

onic

a A.

Bre

iby

13.3

513

.55

The

mus

eum

as

an

acto

r in

tour

ism

en

coun

ters

. By

Gyr

id Ø

yen

Evol

ving

nat

ure

base

d to

uris

m p

rodu

cts:

Kno

wl-

edge

dev

elop

men

t and

dr

ivin

g fo

rces

. By

Kris

tin L

øset

h

Beau

tiful

but

ex

pens

ive:

Pas

sen-

ger-

surv

ey a

t Aku

reyr

i ha

rbou

r, N

orth

ern

Icel

and.

By

Þór

ný B

arða

dótti

r

Page 21: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

21

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

IV, 1

235-

1355

- W

EDN

ESD

AY 2

6 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN (E

102)

STJE

RNØ

YA

(A10

4)

Sess

ion:

2: T

ouri

sm

enco

unte

rs in

the

sub-

arct

ic N

orth

: Im

plic

atio

ns a

nd

dile

mm

as.

1: C

omin

g to

our

se

nses

in to

uris

m?

8: In

nova

tion

and

entr

epre

neur

ship

.

25/2

7: M

ariti

me

tour

-is

m: C

halle

nges

and

op

port

uniti

es

of c

ruis

ing.

9: H

uman

fact

ors

in th

e to

uris

m a

nd h

ospi

talit

y se

rvic

es.

3. C

ity to

uris

m:

Dile

mm

as a

nd

impl

icat

ions

in

dest

inat

ion

deve

lopm

ent.

22: T

rans

form

ing

dest

inat

ions

: Tou

rism

dy

nam

ics,

go

vern

ance

and

lo

calit

ies

in c

hang

e.

10: S

usta

inab

le

expe

rien

ces

in

tour

ism

.

Chai

r:Be

ate

Burs

ta,

Trin

e Kv

idal

-Røv

ik,

Kjel

l Ols

en &

Out

i Ra

ntal

a

Mad

s Bø

dker

& A

na

Mar

ia M

unar

Pete

r Fi

sche

rH

in H

eem

stra

, Pet

er

Hau

gset

h &

Urb

an

Wrå

kber

g

Olg

a G

jera

ld &

Åse

H

elen

e Ba

kkev

ig

Dag

slan

dG

öran

And

erss

onJa

rkko

Saa

rine

n &

O

uti K

ulus

järv

iH

ogne

Øia

n &

M

onik

a A.

Bre

iby

12.3

512

.55

“Wal

k th

e lin

e”:

seas

onal

ity a

nd

bord

er c

ross

ings

at

Arc

tic C

ircl

e la

ndm

arks

: An

ethn

ogra

phic

st

udy

of to

uris

ts’

prac

tices

– c

ase

Rova

niem

i. By

Alix

Va

rnaj

ot

Gui

ding

with

bod

y an

d m

ind

thro

ugh

soun

dsca

pes

of

Arct

ic n

atur

e.

By E

llen

J. Kv

alsv

ik

The

elus

ive

inno

vatio

n ac

tiv-

ity in

tour

ism

. By

Ole

Ber

gese

n, S

igbj

ørn

Tvet

eraa

s &

Jing

hua

Xie

Dev

elop

men

t of

ocea

n cr

uisi

ng in

the

Peop

le’s

Repu

blic

of

Chin

a.

By V

éron

ique

Mon

dou

The

effec

ts o

f lea

der-

ship

sty

le o

n re

stau

rant

em

ploy

ees’

com

mitm

ent t

o se

rvic

e qu

ality

. By

Kla

es E

ringa

&

Mar

ijke

Nic

olai

Resp

onsi

ble

tour

ism

de

velo

pmen

t in

Nor

ther

n N

orw

ay: A

st

udy

of th

e pr

oces

s of

mak

ing

the

city

of

Trom

sø a

sus

tain

able

de

stin

atio

n.

By K

ristin

Lin

dqui

st

Colla

bora

tion

and

soci

al c

apita

l in

rura

l ar

eas:

Tou

rism

as

driv

ing

forc

e fo

r re

sil-

ienc

e.

By C

ecili

a de

Ber

nard

i

Colla

bora

tive

deve

lopm

ent o

f su

stai

nabi

lity

at th

e de

stin

atio

n le

vel.

By K

aarin

a Te

rvo-

Kank

are

12.5

513

.15

Impl

icat

ions

and

di

lem

mas

: Off

erin

g si

tes

and

the

land

-sc

ape:

On

traffi

c-

and

othe

r re

latio

ns

in C

ircu

mpo

lar

Euro

pe.

By K

jell

Ols

en

Des

igni

ng s

ensi

tive

natu

re to

uris

m

arch

itect

ure.

By

Miia

Mäk

inen

&

Out

i Ran

tala

New

dir

ectio

ns fo

r en

trep

rene

urs

with

in n

atur

e ba

sed

busi

ness

: The

ob

stac

les

and

poss

ibili

ties

with

tour

ism

. By

Ann

a Sö

rens

son,

Ann

ika

Caw

thor

n &

Mar

ia B

ogre

n

Are

we

so v

ery

diff

eren

t? C

oncl

usio

ns

of a

Nor

th/S

outh

in

vest

igat

ion

into

the

rece

ivin

g of

cru

ise

ship

s. B

y Tr

acy

Har

kiso

n, Þ

órný

Ba

rðad

óttir

Reap

prai

sal:

A be

nefic

ial e

mot

ion

regu

latio

n st

rate

gy

whe

n fa

cing

job

stre

ssor

s? A

stu

dy o

f ho

tel m

anag

ers’

wel

l-be

ing.

By

Anni

e H

aver

, Es

pen

Ols

en &

Kris

tin

Aker

jord

et

The

role

of M

ICE

in th

e ev

olut

ion

of d

estin

a-tio

ns: F

rom

off

erin

g pl

aces

to g

loba

l go

vern

ance

str

ateg

ies.

By

Hél

ène

Péba

rthe

-D

ésiré

Gui

ded

tour

s an

d em

otio

nal d

esig

n in

U

NES

CO W

orld

H

erita

ge s

ites:

The

ca

se o

f Suo

men

lin-

na F

ortr

ess.

By

Oon

a Si

mol

in

13.1

513

.35

Nor

weg

ian

Scen

ic

Rout

es a

nd lo

cal

influ

ence

: Co

llabo

ratio

n or

co

nsen

t?

By B

eate

Bur

sta

Perc

eptio

n of

the

Arct

ic: W

inte

r re

crea

tion

and

plac

e at

tach

men

t on

Sval

bard

. By

Dor

a B

Aam

ot

Enga

ge o

r av

oid?

How

do

hote

l ow

ners

rel

ate

to a

nd

inte

ract

with

loca

l act

ors

in

rura

l Nor

way

? By

Agn

es B

rudv

ik E

nges

et &

Ka

rolin

e D

augs

tad

Crui

sing

tour

ism

as

a pa

th to

a s

usta

inab

le

futu

re?

The

ethn

ogra

phic

cas

e of

a

new

cru

isin

g qu

ay

on G

otla

nd, S

wed

en.

By U

lrika

Per

sson

-Fi

schi

er

Asym

met

ric

effec

ts o

f st

aff m

ism

atch

on

long

ru

n te

chni

cal e

ffici

ency

: A

Baye

sian

app

roac

h.

By F

ikru

Ale

may

ehu

&

Sigb

jørn

Tve

terå

s

Loca

l tou

rism

age

ncy

in

dest

inat

ion

chan

ge: A

po

stst

ruct

ural

pol

itica

l ec

onom

ic v

iew

. By

Out

i Kul

usjä

rvi

Sust

aina

bilit

y an

d ex

peri

entia

l val

ues

on to

uris

m d

estin

a-tio

ns.

By M

onic

a A.

Bre

iby

13.3

513

.55

The

mus

eum

as

an

acto

r in

tour

ism

en

coun

ters

. By

Gyr

id Ø

yen

Evol

ving

nat

ure

base

d to

uris

m p

rodu

cts:

Kno

wl-

edge

dev

elop

men

t and

dr

ivin

g fo

rces

. By

Kris

tin L

øset

h

Beau

tiful

but

ex

pens

ive:

Pas

sen-

ger-

surv

ey a

t Aku

reyr

i ha

rbou

r, N

orth

ern

Icel

and.

By

Þór

ný B

arða

dótti

r

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

V, 1

415-

1535

- W

EDN

ESD

AY 2

6 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

6810

87M

AGER

ØY

(A10

3)BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN (E

102)

STJE

RNØ

YA

(A10

4)

Sess

ion:

29: A

dvan

cem

ents

in

eve

nt

man

agem

ent.

22: T

rans

form

-in

g de

stin

atio

ns:

Tour

ism

dyn

amic

s,

gove

rnan

ce a

nd

loca

litie

s in

cha

nge.

8: In

nova

tion

and

entr

epre

neur

ship

.

28: T

ouri

sm

dim

ensi

on o

f wat

er

sust

aina

bilit

y.

4: Im

plic

atio

ns o

f the

ci

rcul

ar a

nd s

hari

ng

econ

omy

in to

uris

m.

16: T

ouri

sm e

duca

tion

and

prov

isio

n of

co

mpe

tenc

e.

23: I

ndig

enou

s en

tre-

pren

eurs

hip,

in

dige

nous

kno

wle

dge

and

tour

ism

.

14: W

ildlif

e to

uris

m.

Chai

r:To

mm

y D

. An-

ders

son

& Jo

hn

Arm

brec

ht

Jark

ko S

aari

nen

&

Out

i Kul

usjä

rvi

Pete

r Fi

sche

rSt

ina

Alri

ksso

n, M

ari-

anna

Str

zele

cka

&

C. M

icha

el H

all

Jesp

er M

anni

che,

Rik

ke

Bran

dt B

roeg

aard

&

Evgu

eni V

inog

rado

v

Gus

tav

Onn

&

Kajs

a G

. Åbe

rg

Vigd

is N

ygaa

rd, B

rynh

ild

Gra

nås,

Tri

ne

Kvid

al-R

øvik

, Kje

ll O

lsen

&Al

bina

Pas

hkev

ich

Stia

n St

ensl

and,

Dav

id

A. F

enne

ll &

N

ikol

ine

Dyb

sand

14.1

514

.35

Fest

ival

ent

husi

-as

ts: C

hara

cter

is-

tics

of fr

eque

nt

atte

ndee

s at

rh

ythm

mus

ic

fest

ival

s in

Fin

land

. By

Maa

rit K

innu

nen

& M

ervi

Luo

nila

Inte

rpre

tatio

n an

d ru

ral t

ouri

sm

com

mun

ity

deve

lopm

ent.

By

Jess

ica

Aqui

no &

An

na V

. Ein

arsd

óttir

Com

mod

ifyin

g ou

tdoo

r re

crea

tion

in th

e na

ture

-bas

ed to

uris

m

dom

ain:

Insi

ghts

from

a

Del

phi s

urve

y.

By P

eter

Fre

dman

Wat

er-s

carc

ity a

nd

lodg

ing

indu

stry

in

Mug

a ba

sin

(Gir

ona,

Sp

ain)

: Per

cept

ion,

pr

oble

ms

and

actio

ns.

By M

aria

Tor

res-

Bagu

r, Jo

sep

Vila

Sub

irós,

An

na R

ibas

Pal

om

Tour

ism

in th

e ci

rcul

ar

econ

omy.

By

Jørg

en O

. Bæ

renh

oldt

&

Fle

mm

ing

Søre

nsen

Dig

ital c

ompe

tenc

y de

velo

pmen

t am

ong

tour

ism

ent

erpr

ises

: Ex

peri

ence

s fr

om D

en-

mar

k.

By Id

a M

arie

V.

And

erse

n

Are

we

ther

e ye

t?

Indi

geno

us to

uris

m

and

the

man

oeuv

ring

in

a te

rrai

n of

tens

ion.

By

Trin

e Kv

idal

-Røv

ik

Evol

utio

n in

tour

ism

pu

blic

sec

tor

polic

y:

Tow

ard

an e

thic

for

non-

hum

an a

nim

als.

By

Dav

id A

. Fen

nell

&

Vale

rie A

. She

ppar

d

14.3

514

.55

The

Nor

th S

ea

Race

in a

hea

lth

pers

pect

ive:

The

re

latio

nshi

p be

twee

n pa

rtic

-ip

ants

’ wee

kly

trai

ning

hou

rs a

nd

mot

ivat

ion.

By

Reid

ar J

Myk

letu

n

DM

O: H

ow to

ba

lanc

e th

e di

ffer

-en

t sha

reho

lder

’s in

tere

sts

and

crea

te

a co

mm

on g

oal?

By

Hel

ene

K. T

olst

ad

Expe

rien

tizat

ion

of m

icro

an

d sm

all b

usin

esse

s:

Addi

ng v

alue

by

inte

grat

ing

expe

rien

ces.

By

Mor

ten

Boes

en

Miti

gatin

g w

ater

sh

orta

ge im

pact

s:

Wat

er c

onsu

mp-

tion

and

sect

oral

ad

apta

tions

am

ong

tour

ism

and

farm

ing

ente

rpri

ses

in Ö

land

, So

uth

East

Sw

eden

. By

Chris

ter F

ogha

gen

The

circ

ular

eco

nom

y an

d tr

ansf

orm

ativ

e to

uris

m.

By Je

sper

Man

nich

e,

Karin

Top

sø L

arse

n &

Ri

kke

Bran

dt B

roeg

aard

Exam

inin

g to

uris

m a

nd

hosp

italit

y st

uden

ts’

bach

elor

thes

es.

By

Åsa

Gra

hn &

O

lga

Gje

rald

Asse

ssm

ent o

f in

dige

nous

ent

repr

e-ne

ursh

ip in

tour

ism

se

ctor

: A c

ase

stud

y of

Bh

anda

rdar

a- K

alsu

bai

Wild

life

Sanc

tuar

y. B

y Ra

vind

ra Ja

ybha

ye &

Pr

avee

n Sa

ptar

shi

The

influ

ence

of

assu

med

con

sequ

ence

s an

d so

cial

nor

ms

on

bird

ing

tour

ist

beha

viou

r. B

y St

ian

Sten

slan

d, Ø

yste

in A

as &

M

ehm

et M

ehm

etog

lu

14.5

515

.15

Don

’t ha

ve to

do

it:

Just

dre

am it

. By

Tom

my

Ande

rsso

n &

John

Arm

brec

ht

Terr

oris

m a

nd

effec

ts o

n to

uris

m.

By C

hris

ter E

ldh

The

valu

e of

incr

emen

tal

and

limin

al in

nova

tions

for

lear

ning

tour

ism

de

stin

atio

ns.

By P

eter

Fis

cher

In h

ot w

ater

: The

cas

e of

Arc

tic c

har

in to

uris

m.

By G

uðrú

n H

elga

dótti

r

Shar

ing

econ

omy

in

Nor

weg

ian

urba

n to

uris

m: S

usta

inab

le

impa

cts?

By

Irat

xe L

anda

M

ata

& E

ivin

d Fa

rsta

d

Intr

oduc

ing

expe

ri-

ence

-bas

ed e

duca

tion

met

hods

in to

uris

m

stud

ies

curr

icul

um:

Case

stu

dy o

f Vid

zem

e U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es, L

atvi

a. B

y Iv

eta

D. D

ruva

skal

ne, I

lze

Grin

feld

e &

Lin

da V

eliv

erro

nena

Two-

eyed

see

ing:

An

inte

grat

ive

co-le

arni

ng

proc

ess.

By

Ann

e W

. Rya

n

Wild

life

tour

ists

’ re-

actio

ns to

not

see

ing

the

anim

al th

ey w

ould

lik

e to

see

: Pol

ar b

ear

tour

ism

as

a ca

se s

tudy

. By

Nik

olin

e H

ambr

o D

ybsa

nd

14.1

515

.35

Even

t sta

rt-u

ps a

s ca

taly

sts

for

plac

e,

spor

t and

tour

ism

de

velo

pmen

t: M

omen

t sca

pes

and

geog

raph

ical

co

nsid

erat

ions

. By

Kar

i Jæ

ger

Co-h

abita

tion:

to

uris

m a

nd o

ther

se

ctor

s th

e W

est

Fjor

ds, I

cela

nd.

By E

lva

B. E

inar

sdót

tir

Wha

t fac

tors

det

er-

min

e gu

ests

’ wat

er

savi

ng b

ehav

iour

at

hote

ls th

at a

pply

wa-

ter-

savi

ng m

easu

res?

By

Aria

dna

G.

Mal

lorq

uí, X

avie

r G

arci

a, R

osa

M.

Frag

uell

& A

nna

R.

Palo

m

The

adop

tion

and

deve

lopm

ent o

f Air

bnb

serv

ices

in N

orw

ay: A

re

gion

al p

ersp

ectiv

e.

By E

vgue

ni V

inog

rado

v &

Ab

bas

Strø

mm

en-

Bakh

tiar

Real

pro

blem

s –

real

co

mpe

tenc

e? D

oes

usin

g re

al li

fe b

usin

ess

chal

leng

es le

ad to

bet

ter

com

pete

nce

with

in h

igh-

er e

duca

tion:

Cas

e st

udy

of a

ttra

ctio

n de

velo

p-m

ent c

ours

e in

Sto

ck-

holm

sou

ther

n ar

chip

el-

ago.

By

Gus

taf O

nn

Supp

ortin

g to

uris

m

entr

epre

neur

ship

in

Ssm

i are

as: F

inan

cial

an

d po

litic

al in

stru

-m

ents

in N

orw

ay a

nd

Swed

en.

By V

igdi

s N

ygaa

rd,

Albi

na P

ashk

evic

h &

Li

ne M

athi

sen

Sust

aina

ble

fishi

ng

prac

tice:

Ass

essi

ng th

e pr

esen

ce a

nd q

ualit

y of

ca

tch-

and-

rele

ase

(C&

R)

guid

elin

es o

n to

uris

m

oper

ator

s’ w

ebsi

tes.

By

Pat

rik R

önnb

äck,

M

algo

rzat

aBl

icha

rska

, Sam

Bly

th,

Jody

and

oko

& G

öran

Sund

blad

Page 22: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

22

PARA

LLEL

SES

SIO

NS

VI, 1

550-

1710

- W

EDN

ESD

AY 2

6 SE

PTEM

BER

ROO

M10

87BR

ATTH

OLM

EN

(A10

5)SE

ILAN

D

(A20

3)LO

PPA

(A20

4)KU

LTU

RSAL

EN (E

102)

STJE

RNØ

YA

(A10

4)

Sess

ion:

22: T

rans

form

ing

dest

ina-

tions

: Tou

rism

dyn

amic

s,

gove

rnan

ce a

nd lo

calit

ies

in

chan

ge.

28: T

ouri

sm d

imen

sion

of w

ater

su

stai

nabi

lity.

33: F

ilm a

nd m

edia

in

tour

ism

.15

: Saf

ety

and

lead

ersh

ip.

23: I

ndig

enou

s en

tre-

pren

eurs

hip,

indi

geno

us

know

ledg

e an

d to

uris

m.

14: W

ildlif

e to

uris

m.

Chai

r:Ja

rkko

Saa

rine

n &

Out

i Ku

lusj

ärvi

Stin

a Al

riks

son,

Mar

iann

a St

rzel

ecka

&

C. M

icha

el H

all

Elin

Joha

nsen

& S

tine

Sand

Arild

Røk

enes

Vigd

is N

ygaa

rd, B

rynh

ild

Gra

nås,

Tri

ne K

vida

l-Røv

ik,

Kjel

l Ols

en &

Alb

ina

Pash

kevi

ch

Stia

n St

ensl

and,

Dav

id A

. Fen

nell

& N

ikol

ine

Dyb

sand

15.5

016

.10

GO

And

øy. G

over

ning

to

uris

m a

nd c

omm

unity

tr

ansi

tion.

By

Ann

iken

Før

de

The

wat

er-e

nerg

y ne

xus

in

hote

ls a

nd r

ecre

atio

nal a

ctiv

ities

of

Ben

idor

m, S

pain

. By

Hye

rim Y

oon

& D

avid

Sau

ri

The

valu

e of

trav

el

guid

eboo

ks in

the

digi

tal

age.

By

Mic

ol M

ieli

The

deve

lopm

ent o

f a

risk

man

agem

ent

syst

em fo

r na

ture

-bas

ed

tour

ism

in N

orw

ay.

By A

rild

Røke

nes

From

rei

ndee

r he

rder

to

tour

ism

en

trep

rene

ur?

Refle

ctio

ns a

nd le

sson

s le

arnt

from

Sw

edis

h ca

se S

tudi

es.

By D

iete

r Mül

ler

Scie

nce

tour

ism

as

a fo

rm o

f w

ildlif

e to

uris

m.

By Ju

ulia

ikkö

nen,

Miia

Gré

nman

&

Ilar

i Sää

ksjä

rvi

16.1

016

.30

Des

tinat

ion

com

mun

ities

, re

silie

nce

and

sust

aina

bilit

y: G

over

ning

lo

calit

ies

in c

hang

e.

By Ja

rkko

Saa

rinen

Toile

ts a

nd to

uris

m: A

cri

tical

yet

hi

dden

asp

ect o

f the

tour

ism

env

i-ro

nmen

t. By

C. M

icha

el H

all

The

effec

ts o

f soc

ial m

edia

m

arke

ting

impl

emen

tatio

n on

mar

ketin

g pr

actic

es in

SM

TEs.

By

Hen

rik V

irtan

en &

Pe

ter B

jörk

Bein

g ra

ised

in th

e ou

tdoo

rs m

akes

a

diff

eren

ce w

hen

a ni

ce

mou

ntai

n hi

ke b

ecom

es

a di

fficu

lt on

e. B

y Re

idar

J.M

ykle

tun,

Pet

er F

.Om

a &

Ø

yste

in A

as

Perf

orm

ing

spac

es fo

r cr

eativ

ity a

nd in

nova

tion:

En

trep

rene

ursh

ip in

Sam

i To

uris

m.

By B

rynh

ild G

ranå

s &

Li

ne M

athi

sen

Dis

enga

gem

ent,

ambi

guity

and

is

olat

ion

in w

ildlif

e co

nser

vatio

n.

By A

dria

na B

udea

nu

16.3

016

.50

Tour

ism

dim

ensi

on o

f wat

er s

us-

tain

abili

ty: A

th

emat

ic r

evie

w.

By C

. Mic

hael

Hal

l &

Mar

iann

a St

rzel

ecka

The

poss

ibili

ties

of 3

60-v

id-

eos

in m

arke

ting

of a

nat

ure

tour

ism

des

tinat

ion.

By

Jenn

i Mik

kone

n, K

atja

Pa

sane

n, H

enna

Kon

u, Ju

ho

Peso

nen

Rese

arch

ers

as s

parr

ing

part

ners

: Im

port

ance

of

dial

ogue

-bas

ed m

etho

d in

con

junc

tion

with

Sam

i en

trep

rene

urs.

By

Siv

Mer

ethe

Sar

a

16.5

017

.10

Tour

ism

in m

inin

g ar

eas

of N

orth

ern

Swed

en:

Land

of p

ossi

bilit

ies

or

cont

inuo

us s

trug

gle?

By

Alb

ina

Pash

kevi

ch

Page 23: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

23

SYM

POSI

UM

PA

RTIC

IPA

NTS

Aam

ot, D

ora

B.

Abba

sian

, Sae

id

Akro

ng, K

enne

dy

Algo

tson

, Stin

a

Alri

ksso

n, S

tina

Álva

rez

Cast

añed

a, A

ndré

s

Ande

rsen

, Ida

Mar

ie V

isbe

ch

Ande

rsso

n Ce

derh

olm

, Eri

ka

Ande

rsso

n, G

öran

Ande

rsso

n, T

omm

y

Anth

onse

n Rø

sbø,

June

Aqui

no, J

essi

ca

Arm

brec

ht, J

ohn

Aro,

Kai

sa

Ásge

irss

on, M

agnú

s

Barð

adót

tir, Þ

órný

Ben

Ali,

Amir

a

Björ

k, P

eter

Bjør

kli,

Hild

e

Blic

hfel

dt, B

odil

Blum

enth

al, V

eron

ica

Boes

en, M

orte

n

Bohn

, Dor

othe

e

Brau

nerh

ielm

, Lot

ta

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Söde

rtör

n U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Besö

ksnä

ringe

ns F

oU fo

nd

Linn

aeus

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f the

Val

ley

of G

uate

mal

a

UCL

Uni

vers

ity C

olle

ge

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Söde

rtör

n U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Hól

ar U

nive

rsity

Col

lege

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Uni

vers

ity o

f Tur

ku

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ice

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Aku

reyr

i

Cope

nhag

en B

usin

ess S

choo

l

Han

ken

Scho

ol o

f Eco

nom

ics

Nor

ther

n N

orw

ay T

ouris

t Boa

rd

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sou

ther

n D

enm

ark

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Zeal

and

Inst

itute

of B

usin

ess a

nd T

echn

olog

y

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Karls

tad

Uni

vers

ity

dora

.b.a

amot

@ui

t.no

saei

d.ab

basia

n@sh

.se

akro

ngkk

@gm

ail.c

om

stin

a@bf

uf.s

e

stin

a.al

rikss

on@

lnu.

se

aalv

arez

@uv

g.ed

u.gt

idav

@ea

l.dk

erik

a.an

ders

son_

cede

rhol

m@

ism.lu

.se

gora

n.an

ders

son@

sh.s

e

tom

my.

ande

rsso

n@ha

ndel

s.gu

.se

june

.a.ro

sbo@

uit.n

o

jess

ica@

hola

r.is

john

.arm

brec

ht@

hand

els.

gu.s

e

kaisa

.m.a

ro@

utu.

fi

mha

@hi

.is

thor

ny@

unak

.is

emira

bena

li@gm

ail.c

om

pete

r.bjo

rk@

hank

en.fi

hild

e@no

rdno

rge.

com

bsb@

sdu.

dk

vero

nica

.blu

men

thal

@ui

s.no

mob

o@ea

sj.dk

doro

thee

.boh

n@gm

ail.c

om

lotta

.bra

uner

hiel

m@

kau.

se

Page 24: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

24

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Brei

by, M

onic

a Ad

ele

Broe

gaar

d, R

ikke

Bra

ndt

Bude

anu,

Adr

iana

Burs

ta, B

eate

Bødk

er, M

ads

Cabr

era,

Ast

rid

Mar

ia

Cava

gnar

o, E

lena

Dag

slan

d, Å

se H

elen

e Ba

kkev

ig

De

Bern

ardi

, Cec

ilia

Dem

irog

lu, C

enk

Dru

va-D

ruva

skal

ne, I

veta

Eger

, Cla

udia

Eina

rsdó

ttir

, Ann

a Vi

lbor

g

Eina

rsdó

ttir

, Elv

a Bj

örg

Ekeb

jär,

Kari

n

Ekon

en, M

aria

nne

Ekse

ll, Jö

rgen

Eldh

, Chr

iste

r

Enge

set,

Agne

s Br

udvi

k

Erin

ga, K

laes

Eski

lsso

n, L

ena

Esko

la, M

ona

Espi

ritu

, Aile

en A

sero

n

Fenn

ell,

Dav

id

Inla

nd N

orw

ay U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Uni

vers

ity o

f Cop

enha

gen

Cope

nhag

en B

usin

ess S

choo

l

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Cope

nhag

en B

usin

ess S

choo

l

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

NH

L St

ende

n U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Dal

arna

Uni

vers

ity

Um

eå U

nive

rsity

Vidz

eme

Uni

vers

ity o

f App

lied

Scie

nces

Cope

nhag

en B

usin

ess S

choo

l

Hol

ar U

nive

rsity

Col

lege

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ice

land

Regi

onfö

rbun

det i

Kal

mar

Län

JAM

K U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Wes

tern

Nor

way

Res

earc

h In

stitu

te

NH

L St

ende

n U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Broc

k U

nive

rsity

mon

ica.b

reib

y@in

n.no

rbb@

crt.d

k

abu.

mpp

@cb

s.dk

beat

e.bu

rsta

@ui

t.no

mb.

digi

@cb

s.dk

aca0

29@

uit.n

o

elen

a.ca

vagn

aro@

sten

den.

com

aase

-hel

ene.

b.da

gsla

nd@

uis.

no

cdb@

du.s

e

cenk

.dem

irogl

u@um

u.se

ivet

a.dr

uva@

va.lv

ce.in

t@cb

s.dk

anna

vilb

org@

mai

l.hol

ar.is

elva

b@hi

.is

karin

.eke

bjar

@rf

kl.s

e

mar

iann

e.ek

onen

@ja

mk.

fi

jorg

en.e

ksel

l@isk

.lu.s

e

chris

ter.e

ldh@

ism.lu

.se

abe@

vest

fors

k.no

klae

s.er

inga

@st

ende

n.co

m

Lena

.Esk

ilsso

n@ism

.lu.s

e

moe

skol

a@ul

apla

nd.fi

aile

en.a

.esp

iritu

@ui

t.no

dfen

nell@

broc

ku.c

a

Page 25: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

25

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Fisc

her,

Pete

r

Fogh

agen

, Chr

iste

r

Foss

gard

, Knu

t

Fred

man

, Pet

er

Furu

nes,

Tru

de

Fälto

n, E

mel

ie

Førd

e, A

nnik

en

Åber

g, K

ajsa

G.

Gar

cia,

Xav

ier

Gar

cía-

Rose

ll, Jo

sé-C

arlo

s

Gib

son,

Lai

la

Gje

rald

, Olg

a

Goo

laup

, San

dhiy

a

Gra

hn, Å

sa

Gra

nås,

Bry

nhild

Gre

nman

. Miia

Gri

mw

ood,

Bry

an

Gun

nars

dótt

ir, G

uðrú

n Þó

ra

Haa

npää

, Min

ni

Hak

kara

inen

. Mar

ia

Hal

l, C.

Mic

hael

Ham

bro

Dyb

sand

, Nik

olin

e

Han

sen,

Kai

Vic

tor

Har

ju-M

ylly

aho,

Anu

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Linn

aeus

Uni

vers

ity

Nor

weg

ian

Uni

vers

ity o

f Life

Scie

nces

Nor

weg

ian

Uni

vers

ity o

f Life

Scie

nces

Nor

weg

ian

Scho

ol o

f Hot

el M

anag

emen

t

Link

öpin

g U

nive

rsity

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Regi

on V

äste

rbot

ten

Uni

vers

ity o

f Giro

na

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Karls

tads

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Uni

vers

ity o

f Tur

ku

Uni

vers

ity o

f Wat

erlo

o

Uni

vers

ity o

f Aku

reyr

i

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Can

terb

ury

The

Nor

weg

ian

Uni

vers

ity o

f Life

Scie

nces

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

pete

r.fisc

her@

uit.n

o

chris

ter.f

ogha

gen@

lnu.

se

knut

.foss

gard

@nm

bu.n

o

pete

r.fre

dman

@nm

bu.n

o

trud

e.fu

rune

s@ui

s.no

emel

ie.fa

lton@

liu.s

e

anni

ken.

ford

e@ui

t.no

kajsa

.abe

rg@

regi

onva

ster

botte

n.se

xavi

er.g

arcia

acos

ta@

udg.

edu

jgar

cia@

ulap

land

.fi

laila

.gib

son@

kau.

se

olga

.gje

rald

@ui

s.no

sand

hiya

.goo

laup

@ha

ndel

s.gu

.se

asa.

grah

n@ui

s.no

bryn

hild

.gra

nas@

uit.n

o

miia

.gre

nman

@ut

u.fi

bgrim

woo

d@uw

ater

loo.

ca

gudr

unth

ora@

unak

.is

min

ni.h

aanp

aa@

ulap

land

.fi

mar

ia.h

akka

rain

en@

ulap

land

.fi

mich

ael.h

all@

cant

erbu

ry.a

c.nz

hidy

@nm

bu.n

o

kai.v

.han

sen@

uis.

no

anu.

harju

-myl

lyah

o@la

pina

mk.

fi

Page 26: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

26

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Har

kiso

n, T

racy

Hau

g, B

ente

Hau

gset

h, P

eter

Hav

er, A

nnie

Hei

mtu

n, B

ente

Hel

dt C

asse

l, Su

sann

a

Hél

ène,

Péb

arth

e-D

ésir

é

Hel

gadó

ttir

, Guð

rún

Hje

mda

hl, K

irst

i Mat

hies

en

Hoa

rau-

Hee

mst

ra, H

in

Höc

kert

, Em

ily

Jaco

bsen

, Jen

s Kr

. Ste

en

Jath

e, K

athr

in

Jayb

haye

, Rav

indr

a

Jern

sand

, Eva

Mar

ia

Jeur

ing,

Jelm

er

Jóha

nnes

son,

Gun

nar

Thór

Joha

nsen

, Gør

il

Júlíu

sdót

tir, M

agnf

ríðu

r

Jæge

r, Ka

ri

Jørg

ense

n, M

atia

s Th

uen

Kinn

unen

, Maa

rit

Koro

sche

tz, B

ianc

a

Kram

vig,

Bri

tt

Auck

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Tec

hnol

ogy

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Dal

arna

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ang

ers

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sou

th-E

aste

rn N

orw

ay

Nor

ce

Nor

d U

nive

rsity

Linn

aeus

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Nor

weg

ian

Uni

vers

ity o

f Life

Scie

nces

Savi

trib

ai P

hule

Pun

e U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Um

eå U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ice

land

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ice

land

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Rosk

ilde

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

trac

y.ha

rkiso

n@au

t.ac.

nz

bent

e.ha

ug@

uit.n

o

pete

r.hau

gset

h@ui

t.no

anni

e.ha

ver@

uis.

no

bent

e.he

imtu

n@ui

t.no

shc@

du.s

e

hele

ne.p

ebar

the@

univ

-ang

ers.

fr

gudr

un.h

elga

dotti

r@us

n.no

kihj

@no

rcer

esea

rch.

no

hin.

h.he

emst

ra@

nord

.no

emily

.hoc

kert

@ln

u.se

jens

.s.ja

cobs

en@

uis.

no

kath

rin.ja

the@

nmbu

.no

jayb

haye

rg@

gmai

l.com

eva.

mar

ia.je

rnsa

nd@

hand

els.

gu.s

e

jelm

er.je

urin

g@um

u.se

gtj@

hi.is

goer

il.joh

anse

n@ui

t.no

mj@

hi.is

kari.

jage

r@ui

t.no

mat

iast

j@ru

c.dk

maa

rkin

n@ul

apla

nd.fi

bian

ca.k

oros

chet

z@gu

.se

britt

.kra

mvi

g@ui

t.no

Page 27: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

27

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Kuga

pi, O

uti

Kulu

sjär

vi, O

uti

Kval

svik

, Elle

n-Jo

hann

e

Kvam

, Ton

je

Kvar

berg

Tol

stad

, Hel

ene

Kvid

al-R

øvik

, Tri

ne

Kwia

tkow

ski,

Grz

egor

z

Land

a M

ata,

Irat

xe

Lars

en, S

vein

Lee,

You

ng-S

ook

Lens

u, A

nssi

Lerf

ald,

Mer

ethe

Lind

quis

t, Kr

istin

Ljun

ggre

n, E

lisab

et

Lund

, Kat

rín

Anna

Lund

berg

, Eri

k

Løse

th, K

rist

in

Mal

mis

alo-

Lens

u, A

nne-

Mai

ja

Man

nich

e, Je

sper

Mar

gary

an, L

usin

e

Mar

istu

en, H

elen

e

McK

ee, M

ark

Mie

li, M

icol

Mie

lke,

Chu

n-Ju

Mol

ina,

Mòn

ica

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Oul

u

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Nor

d U

nive

rsity

Inla

nd N

orw

ay U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Wes

tern

Nor

way

Uni

vers

ity o

f App

lied

Scie

nces

Inst

itute

of T

rans

port

Eco

nom

ics

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ber

gen

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Uni

vers

ity o

f Jyv

äsky

Øst

land

sfor

skni

ng A

S

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Nor

d U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ice

land

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Wes

tern

Nor

way

Uni

vers

ity o

f App

lied

Scie

nces

Uni

vers

ity o

f Jyv

äsky

Cent

re fo

r Reg

iona

l and

Tou

rism

Res

earc

h

Mid

Sw

eden

Uni

vers

ity

Wes

tern

Uni

vers

ity o

f App

lied

Scie

nces

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Tayl

or &

Fra

ncis

Uni

vers

itat A

uton

oma

de B

arce

lona

outi.

kuga

pi@

ulap

land

.fi

outi.

kulu

sjarv

i@ou

lu.fi

elle

n-j.k

valsv

ik@

live.

no

tonj

e.kv

am@

gmai

l.com

hele

ne.to

lstad

@hi

l.no

trin

e.kv

idal

@ui

t.no

grze

gorz

.kw

iatk

owsk

i@tu

.kos

zalin

.pl

ilm@

toi.n

o

svei

n.la

rsen

@ui

b.no

youn

g-so

ok.le

e@ui

t.no

anss

i.lens

u@jy

u.fi

ml@

ostfo

rsk.

no

krist

inlin

dqui

st80

@gm

ail.c

om

elisa

bet.c

.ljung

gren

@no

rd.n

o

kl@

hi.is

erik

.lund

berg

@ha

ndel

s.gu

.se

krist

in.lo

seth

@hv

l.no

anne

-mai

ja.k

.mal

misa

lo-le

nsu@

jyu.

fi

man

nich

e@cr

t.dk

lusin

e.m

arga

ryan

@m

iun.

se

hele

ne.m

arist

uen@

hvl.n

o

mgm

k62@

gmai

l.com

mico

l.mie

li@ism

.lu.s

e

judy

.mie

lke@

info

rma.

com

Mon

ica.M

olin

a@ua

b.ca

t

Page 28: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

28

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Mon

dou,

Vér

oniq

ue

Mos

sber

g, L

ena

Mun

ar, A

na M

aría

Myk

letu

n, R

eida

r J

Mül

ler,

Die

ter

Mäk

inen

, Miia

Mån

sson

, Mar

ia

Neg

acz,

Kat

arzy

na

Nic

olai

, Mar

ijke

Nik

ula,

Ari

Nyg

aard

, Vig

dis

Ols

en, K

jell

Onn

, Gus

taf

Pasa

nen,

Kat

ja

Pash

kevi

ch, A

lbin

a

Pers

son-

Fisc

hier

, Ulr

ika

Pizz

ichi

ni, L

ucia

Raad

ik C

ottr

ell,

Jana

Radm

ann,

Aag

e

Raik

kone

n, Ju

ulia

Rant

ala,

Out

i

Ren,

Car

ina

Renf

ors,

San

na-M

ari

Reyn

olds

, Orl

agh

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ang

ers

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Cope

nhag

en B

usin

ess S

choo

l

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Um

eå U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Oul

u

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

War

saw

Sch

ool o

f Eco

nom

ics

Sten

den

Hot

el M

anag

emen

t Sch

ool

Nat

ural

Res

ourc

es In

stitu

te F

inla

nd

Nor

ut N

orth

ern

Rese

arch

Inst

itute

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Söde

rtör

n U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Eas

tern

Fin

land

Dal

arna

Uni

vers

ity

Upp

sala

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

Esto

nian

Mar

itim

e Ac

adem

y Ce

ntre

for B

lue

Econ

omy

Nor

weg

ian

Scho

ol o

f Spo

rt S

cienc

es

Uni

vers

ity o

f Tur

ku

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Aalb

org

Uni

vers

ity

Sata

kunt

a U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Nat

iona

l Uni

vers

ity Ir

elan

d, G

alw

ay

vero

niqu

e.m

ondo

u@un

iv-a

nger

s.fr

lena

.mos

sber

g@ha

ndel

s.gu

.se

amm

.int@

cbs.

dk

reid

ar.j.

myk

letu

n@ui

s.no

diet

er.m

ulle

r@um

u.se

miia

.mak

inen

@ou

lu.fi

mar

ia.m

anss

on@

isk.lu

.se

k.ne

gacz

@gm

ail.c

om

mar

ijken

icola

i@ho

tmai

l.com

ari.n

ikul

a@lu

ke.fi

vigd

isn@

noru

t.no

kjel

l.o.o

lsen@

uit.n

o

gust

af.o

nn@

sh.s

e

katja

.pas

anen

@ue

f.fi

alp@

du.s

e

ulrik

a.pe

rsso

n-fis

chie

r@an

gstr

om.u

u.se

lucia

.pizz

ichin

i@gu

.se

est.j

ana@

gmai

l.com

aage

.radm

ann@

nih.

no

juul

ia.ra

ikko

nen@

utu.

fi

outi.

rant

ala@

ulap

land

.fi

ren@

cgs.

aau.

dk

sann

a-m

ari.r

enfo

rs@

sam

k.fi

orla

gh.re

ynol

ds@

nuig

alw

ay.ie

Page 29: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

29

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Rina

ldi,

Chia

ra

Robi

nson

, Ric

hard

N.S

.

Rose

nber

g, A

xel

Ruoh

o, Ja

ana

Ryan

Ben

gtss

on, L

inda

Ryan

, Ann

e W

ally

Røke

nes,

Ari

ld

Rönn

bäck

, Pat

rik

Saar

inen

, Jar

kko

Sahe

balz

aman

i, Sa

mir

a

Sapt

arsh

i, Pr

avee

n

Sara

, Siv

Mer

ethe

Sara

bi, B

abak

Seid

el, S

arah

Sels

tad,

Lei

f

Selv

aag,

Sofi

e

Shre

stha

, Sab

ina

Sim

olin

, Oon

a

Skav

haug

, Ing

a M

arie

O.

Skre

de, O

ddne

Smed

seng

, Nin

a

Sten

slan

d, S

tian

Strz

elec

ka, M

aria

nna

Strö

mbe

rg, P

er

Uni

vers

ity o

f Got

henb

urg

The

Uni

vers

ity o

f Que

ensla

nd

Nor

weg

ian

Scho

ol o

f Spo

rts S

cienc

es

Sata

kunt

a U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Karls

tad

Uni

vers

ity

Nor

d U

nive

rsity

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Upp

sala

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Oul

u

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Savi

trib

ai P

hule

Pun

e U

nive

rsity

Sara

Siid

a

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

NH

L St

ende

n U

nive

rsity

of A

pplie

d Sc

ienc

es

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Nor

weg

ian

Inst

itute

for N

atur

e Re

sear

ch

Zeal

and

Inst

itute

of B

usin

ess a

nd T

echn

olog

y

Uni

vers

ity o

f Hel

sinki

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Wes

tern

Nor

way

Uni

vers

ity o

f App

lied

Scie

nces

Nor

ther

n N

orw

ay T

ouris

t Boa

rd

Nor

weg

ian

Uni

vers

ity o

f Life

Scie

nces

Linn

aeus

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sou

th-E

aste

rn N

orw

ay

chia

ra.ri

nald

i@gu

.se

richa

rd.ro

bins

on@

uq.e

du.a

u

axel

.rose

nber

g@ni

h.no

jaan

a.ru

oho@

sam

k.fi

linda

.ryan

-ben

gtss

on@

kau.

se

anne

.w.ry

an@

nord

.no

arild

.roke

nes@

uit.n

o

patr

ik.ro

nnba

ck@

geo.

uu.s

e

jark

ko.s

aarin

en@

oulu

.fi

sam

ira.s

aheb

alza

man

i@ui

t.no

prav

een.

sapt

arsh

i@gm

ail.c

om

sivm

sara

@m

sn.c

om

baba

k.sa

rabi

@ui

t.no

sara

h.se

idel

@st

ende

n.co

m

leif.

selst

ad@

uis.

no

sofie

.sel

vaag

@ni

na.n

o

saro

@ea

sj.dk

oona

.sim

olin

@he

lsink

i.fi

inga

.m.s

kavh

aug@

uit.n

o

oddn

e.sk

rede

@hv

l.no

nina

@no

rdno

rge.

com

stia

n.st

ensla

nd@

nmbu

.no

mar

iann

a.st

rzel

ecka

@ln

u.se

per.s

trom

berg

@us

n.no

Page 30: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

30

Nam

eO

rgan

izat

ion

E-m

ail

Sund

bo, D

onna

Sund

bo, J

on

Sund

elin

, Run

e

Sven

sson

, Gau

te

Søre

nsen

, Fle

mm

ing

Söre

nsso

n, A

nna

Terv

o-Ka

nkar

e, K

aari

na

Thor

stei

nsso

n, B

rynj

ar

Torr

es B

agur

, Mar

ia

Tuul

entie

, Sei

ja

Tvet

eraa

s, S

igbj

ørn

Varn

ajot

, Alix

Vike

n, A

rvid

Vino

grad

ov, E

vgue

ni

Wal

msl

ey, A

ndre

as

Wol

ff, K

atha

rina

Wrå

kber

g, U

rban

Xie,

Jing

hua

Yoon

, Hye

rim

Zala

man

s, D

enni

s

Zhan

g, Ju

ndan

Zilli

nger

, Mal

in

Äijä

lä, M

ikko

Øia

n, H

ogne

Øye

n, G

yrid

Uni

vers

ity C

olle

ge A

bsal

on

Rosk

ilde

Uni

vers

ity

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Rosk

ilde

Uni

vers

ity

Mid

Sw

eden

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Oul

u

Bifr

öst U

nive

rsity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Giro

na

Nat

ural

Res

ourc

es In

stitu

te F

inla

nd L

uke

Uni

vers

ity o

f Sta

vang

er

Uni

vers

ity o

f Oul

u

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Nor

dlan

d Re

sear

ch In

stitu

te

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ply

mou

th

Uni

vers

ity o

f Ber

gen

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

Auto

nom

ous U

nive

rsity

of B

arce

lona

Söde

rtör

n U

nive

rsity

Um

eå U

nive

rsity

Lund

Uni

vers

ity

Uni

vers

ity o

f Lap

land

Nor

weg

ian

Inst

itute

for N

atur

e Re

sear

ch

UiT

The

Arc

tic U

nive

rsity

of N

orw

ay

dosu

@ph

a.dk

sund

bo@

ruc.

dk

Rune

.Sun

delin

@ui

t.no

gaut

eem

ilsve

nsso

n@ya

hoo.

no

flem

miso

@ru

c.dk

anna

.sor

enss

on@

miu

n.se

kaar

ina.

terv

o-ka

nkar

e@ou

lu.fi

bryn

jar@

bifr

ost.i

s

mar

ia.to

rres

@ud

g.ed

u

seija

.tuul

entie

@lu

ke.fi

sigbj

orn.

tvet

eras

@ui

s.no

alix

.var

najo

t@ou

lu.fi

arvi

d.vi

ken@

uit.n

o

evi@

nfor

sk.n

o

andr

eas.

wal

msle

y@pl

ymou

th.a

c.uk

Kath

arin

a.W

olff@

uib.

no

urba

n.w

rakb

erg@

uit.n

o

Xie.

jingh

ua@

uit.n

o

hyer

im.y

oon@

uab.

cat

denn

is.za

lam

ans@

sh.s

e

jund

an.zh

ang@

umu.

se

mal

in.zi

llinge

r@ism

.lu.s

e

mik

ko.a

ijala

@ul

apla

nd.fi

hogn

e.oi

an@

nina

.no

gyrid

.oye

n@ui

t.no

Page 31: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

31

Page 32: TOURISM IMPLICATIONS AND DILEMMAS1537365065000/... · Bente Haug, Arvid Viken, Britt Kramvig, Brynhild Granås, Trine Kvidal-Røvik and Bente Heimtun . 4 EMERGENCY SERVICES +47 78

32

OUR PARTNERS: