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Industrial tourism

Australian Government, 2006. Request for Tender Review of Possible Impacts of Nanotechnology on Australia s Regulatory Erameworks. Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources (Innovation Division), Canberra. [Pg.90]

Department of Industry, Tourism and Re-sourees (ITR) http //www.industry.gov.au/nano... [Pg.254]

The primary industries are pulp and paper, lumber, electronics, and tourism. The basin supports extensive wildlife and fish habitat. Precipitation varies from 100 cm at the basin floor to more than 300 cm in the Cascade Range and summers are dry and warm with winters cloudy and wet. Daily average temperatures in the basin range from 1.7 C in winter to 28°C in summer. A cross-sectional profile of the basin is shown in Figure 2A. Figure 2B identifies specific morphological reaches of the main stem Willamette River. [Pg.261]

Terrestrial ecosystems (plants and animals) under water scarcity suffer from water stress, and aquatic ecosystems of intermittency in water flow. Water scarcity has implications on hydrologic resources and systems coimectivity, as well as negative side-effects on biodiversity, water quality, and river ecosystem functioning. Finally, water scarcity has also direct impacts on citizens and economic sectors that use and depend on water, such as agriculture, tourism, industry, energy and transport. [Pg.248]

Even a single HAB episode can be extremely costly. In Maryland in 1997, reported eases of human disease associated with exposure to water containing Pfiesteria piscicida cost the seafood industry alone an estimated 46 million in lost revenue (Anderson et al., 2000). Lewis (1986) found that CFP in the South Paeifie depressed both the local and export fishing industries, affected tourism, and indirectly affected human health (because people avoided eating fresh fish). [Pg.174]

Kyriacos C. Tsimillis The Cypms Organization for the Promotion of Quality -The Cypms Accreditation Body c/o Ministiy of Commerce, Industry and Tourism... [Pg.345]

Department of Industry, Trade, and Tourism www.industry.gov.au(search for "hydrogen")... [Pg.199]

Land redistribution policies have affected the availability of morama. In Botswana, the villages surveyed were built in the late 1980s under the National Program of Resettlement, forming complex interethnic communities with limited access to the "morama areas". Morama beans grow in areas that became inaccessible for local populations since the land in question has mostly been allocated to diamond mining, tourism, and cattle industries. [Pg.232]

A subdivision in the types of decision making clarifies the kinds of people involved. There are public decision-makers who make either policy or management decisions about on-site behaviour. There are marketers in joint public-private cooperative endeavours whose interests include such factors as what will influence travellers to come to place A, B or C. There are also business decision makers concerned with the design and financial success of tourism products. These kinds of interests focus on what tourists will prefer and how they make their travel choices and purchases. Tourism industry lobby groups may also be interested in select tourist behaviour issues, particularly topics such as user-pays fees and taxes on activities. [Pg.10]

The ownership and appeal of the theory. Must appeal to specialist researchers, be useful in tourism industry settings and credible to marketers and consumers... [Pg.55]

Tourist destinations, even more than basic consumer products such as food or household items, are viewed and presented in selective and diverse ways. Tourist places are not just used or promoted by the tourism industry, but are frequently shaped by marketing efforts. In this sense tourism forms and reforms its own product. At the same time, other community and economic forces also shape the destination. As Hughes suggests ... [Pg.89]

Instead of simply prescribing generically-desirable ideal roles as Swarbrooke and others have done, one can adopt a more explicitly remedial and practical approach. Middleton (1998) has identified lORs for environmental actions for the tourism industry as a whole. These suggestions may be re-applied to tourist behaviour itself and represent a comprehensive action-oriented approach to maintaining the sustainability framework of tourist settings. These actions are presented in Table 6.2. [Pg.146]

One of the most widespread tourist behaviour shaping mechanisms is that of visitor education. While all of the preceding mechanisms are important, and some (such as infrastructure design), apply to both the tourism industry and the tourist, education and its corollary in the tourism context interpretation is a major dimension shaping tourist on-site behaviour. [Pg.150]

From the author s immersion experiences as well as the wide ambit of issues discussed in the research literature, several frames of analysis can be identified. First, the focus of attention is on academic tourism research and its purposes. This kind of research can be distinguished from government and industry-based research efforts that have some different overall agendas (Jafari, 1990 Pearce, 1993a). The agendas for government-based studies are much more directed towards market analysis, statistics collection schemes that inform policy and provide classifications of activity. The consultancy-based work conducted for industry organisations and busi-... [Pg.193]

Leiper, N. (1979) The framework of tourism Towards definitions of tourism, tourists and the tourism industry. Annals of Tourism Research 6, 309-407. [Pg.217]

Tourism Marketing A Collaborative Approach Alan Fyall and Brian Garrod Music and Tourism On the Road Again Chris Gibson and John Connell Tourism Development Issues for a Vulnerable Industry Julio Aramberri and Richard Butler (eds)... [Pg.247]

In general, it should be said that the resort-tourism industry of the Black Sea coastal zone of the former Soviet Union is in its transitional period from large complexes to small and medium private hotels, rest houses, camping places, and small bungalows. Today, a new kind of rest industry is developing in the Black Sea coastal zone—from aqua parks to windsurfing, diving, etc. [Pg.429]

There is a policy which deals with the exploration and export of floristic resources of potential medicinal value. Depending on the type of materials required, the policy is regulated by various ministries and departments—in particular the Ministry of Agriculture (Forestry), the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, the Ministry of Trade and Industries, and the... [Pg.114]

The popularity of peasant restaurants is part of a larger phenomenon of culinary tourism that has swept Russia in recent years. Restaurants, food magazines, and the travel industry more generally provide a wide range of possibilities for consumers who want to use food as a means to experience the world, whether vicariously or through actual travel. I discuss this phenomenon more fully in Caldwell 2006. [Pg.180]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.41 ]




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