2014
DOI: 10.1111/jlca.12103
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Multicultural Tourism, Demilitarization, and the Process of Peace Building in Panama

Abstract: R e s u m e nEn este artículo, conecto la negación encubierta de derechos ciudadanos por parte del estado con el desarrollo del turismo con el fin de explicar por qué Panamá presenta la imagen de un estado libre de fuerza policial. Abordo dos conceptos principales: un análisis crítico de la gubernamentalidad en el turismo (Hollinshead 1999(Hollinshead , 2003 y el concepto de turismo como una fuerza "creadora de mundos" (Hollinshead et al. 2009;Merrill 2009;Noy 2011; Reis and Shelton 2011). Aplico estos concept… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…Such a process is referred to as residential tourism (Mollett fieldnotes, 2011;Thampy, 2013;Van Noorloos, 2013). The Panamanian state promises foreign investors a secure land market and offers assurances to domestic residents that these investments will direct employment and financial benefits their way (Mollett fieldnotes, 2012;Guerr on Montero, 2014). Yet, while many local people desire work in tourism, promises of employment remain largely unfulfilled (Guerr on Montero, 2014;Mollett, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Such a process is referred to as residential tourism (Mollett fieldnotes, 2011;Thampy, 2013;Van Noorloos, 2013). The Panamanian state promises foreign investors a secure land market and offers assurances to domestic residents that these investments will direct employment and financial benefits their way (Mollett fieldnotes, 2012;Guerr on Montero, 2014). Yet, while many local people desire work in tourism, promises of employment remain largely unfulfilled (Guerr on Montero, 2014;Mollett, 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Panamanian state promises foreign investors a secure land market and offers assurances to domestic residents that these investments will direct employment and financial benefits their way (Mollett fieldnotes, 2012;Guerr on Montero, 2014). Yet, while many local people desire work in tourism, promises of employment remain largely unfulfilled (Guerr on Montero, 2014;Mollett, 2017). In Bocas, Ng€ abe and Afro-Antillean discontent and widespread cynicism over the lack of dignified employment and precarious job contracts intensify with mounting land tenure insecurities, growing social inequality, and an atmosphere of everyday challenges to local people's lands, waterways, and cultural practices (Guerrero-Montero, 2015;Thampy, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On the Atlantic coasts of Honduras and Panama, tourism is a celebrated state pathway to development. Over the past 20 years, former sleepy fishing villages and vast Caribbean coastlines are now in flux (Guerron Montero ; Mollett ; Spaulding ; Velazquez Runk ). The growing “residentialization” of tourism in Central America resonates with what Antonio Aledo () calls the “New Residential Tourism” (NRT).…”
Section: Biodiversity Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stewardship of monuments and cultural practices has thus done much to underwrite legislation, bureaucratic structures, and forms of knowledge essential to modern nation‐states and transnational programs like UNESCO World Heritage initiatives. Meanwhile, and most recently, growth in leisure tourism and the heritage industry has spurred a proliferation of strategies for promoting patrimony (Babb ; Guerrón ; Hill and Tanaka ; Little ). In much scholarship on heritage, however, living traditions and their reproduction tend to be associated with so‐called intangible patrimonies, or folkloric practices, knowledges, and cultural forms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%