2013
DOI: 10.1108/ijcthr-05-2012-0042
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When death is the destination: the business of death tourism – despite legal and social implications

Abstract: PurposeThis paper views the growing popularity of death tourism which directs the confrontation with grief and mortality with the expressed purpose of orchestrating travel that culminates in assistance to end one's life. The specific aims of this paper are to describe the emerging phenomenon of death tourism and situate it as a form of dark tourism, to present briefly the social and legal aspects of assisted suicide in conjunction within the tourism industry, and to conclude with how the trend of death tourism… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Legal geographers have investigated how utilitarian biomedical narratives have contributed to the global trade of organs (Parry et al, 2015), which has developed into a complex ecosystem of actors and practices situated at the border of the illicit (Lundin, 2012; Mendoza, 2011), moving the body into the realm of the economic. Questions on the body have also brought scholars to investigate those practices that relate to sex work (Hubbard et al, 2009), physician-assisted suicide (Shondell Miller and Gonzalez, 2013) and female reproduction (Moore, 2018; Sheldon, 2018). For instance, Calkin (2019) describes a complex political economic geography of abortion in which social control and regulation over female bodies have pushed many women to seek abortion provisions outside of statal legal frameworks, through various illicit practices and mobilities, such as informal online telemedicine, transnational pill trades and abortion travels.…”
Section: Economic Geographies Of the Illicitmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Legal geographers have investigated how utilitarian biomedical narratives have contributed to the global trade of organs (Parry et al, 2015), which has developed into a complex ecosystem of actors and practices situated at the border of the illicit (Lundin, 2012; Mendoza, 2011), moving the body into the realm of the economic. Questions on the body have also brought scholars to investigate those practices that relate to sex work (Hubbard et al, 2009), physician-assisted suicide (Shondell Miller and Gonzalez, 2013) and female reproduction (Moore, 2018; Sheldon, 2018). For instance, Calkin (2019) describes a complex political economic geography of abortion in which social control and regulation over female bodies have pushed many women to seek abortion provisions outside of statal legal frameworks, through various illicit practices and mobilities, such as informal online telemedicine, transnational pill trades and abortion travels.…”
Section: Economic Geographies Of the Illicitmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, other terms, such as “macabre tourism” or “tragedy‐tourism,” have approached the phenomenon from different perspectives. Nonetheless, despite the lack of consensus on the phenomenon's definition (Light; Shondell Miller and Gonzalez), and regardless of the term employed or how it is parsed, the conceptualizations all propose an association “between a tourism site, attraction or experience and death, disaster or suffering” (Sharpley, “Shedding” 10).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this result is likely biased by the extraordinary peak in the relative search volume in 2005. At that time, the broad public debate about euthanasia and suicide tourism coincided with a higher search activity [40]. Nevertheless, after 2009 (the calculated joinpoint), no likewise peak was observed, and the overall trend followed a negative slope (Table 5).…”
Section: Switzerlandmentioning
confidence: 94%