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Changing Paradigms and Global Change: From Sustainable to
Steady-state Tourism
C. MICHAEL HALL
The field of Tourism Studies has given substantial attention to the issue of sustainability since the late
1980s. However, despite the plethora of publications, conferences, and strategies that deal with sustainability,
tourism is arguably less sustainable than it has ever been. The reasons for this are several-fold and include the relative
weakness of sustainability research in tourism as an epistemic community; economic, institutional and political
barriers; and the inherent problems of the concept in terms of its capacity to marry social, environmental and economic
indicators, and the addiction to economic growth. Following an outline of the expansion of tourism’s contribution to
global environmental change the article provides a re-conceptualization of sustainable tourism from an ecological
economics perspective. From this approach sustainable tourism development is understood as tourism development
without growth in throughput of matter and energy beyond regenerative and absorptive capacities. Steady-state
tourism is, therefore, a tourism system that encourages qualitative development but not aggregate quantitative
growth to the detriment of natural capital. In the case of tourism, more does not mean better, and growth does not
mean development. Tourism policy implications are also examined. It is concluded that while the political-economic
indications for such a transformative approach are not immediately encouraging, the environmental necessity is
stronger than ever.
Keywords: sustainable tourism; global environmental change; epistemic community; ecological economics; degrowth;.
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