Academic literature on the topic 'Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland'

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Journal articles on the topic "Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland"

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Lusseau, David, Liz Slooten, and Rohan J. C. Currey. "Unsustainable Dolphin-watching Tourism in Fiordland, New Zealand." Tourism in Marine Environments 3, no. 2 (December 1, 2006): 173–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.3727/154427306779435184.

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Hall, C. Michael, Ian Mitchell, and Ngawlni Keelan. "Maori Culture and Heritage Tourism in New Zealand." Journal of Cultural Geography 12, no. 2 (March 1992): 115–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08873639209478414.

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Balcar, Mark JO, and Douglas G. Pearce. "Heritage tourism on the West Coast of New Zealand." Tourism Management 17, no. 3 (May 1996): 203–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0261-5177(96)00007-6.

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Stevens, Leigh, Mark Gibbs, Julian Roberts, Dayne Maxwell, and Rob Service. "ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT – A HIGH SPEED VERSION USED IN NEW ZEALAND." International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings 2005, no. 1 (May 1, 2005): 271–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.7901/2169-3358-2005-1-271.

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ABSTRACT Cooperative oil spill Ecological Risk Assessment (C-ERA) is a preparedness tool that seeks consensus-based decisions regarding potential spill and spill response impacts. The established US Coast Guard ERA approach has generally used 1–2 multi-day workshops, several weeks apart, to identify and work through key issues. In New Zealand (NZ), funding limitations required a faster approach. This paper describes the advantages and disadvantages encountered during a modified 1-day version of the ERA conducted for the Fiordland region. Fiordland is a highly valued and remote National Park and World Heritage Area of 1.25 million Ha, with ∼200km of exposed coastline, and ∼1800km internal coastline including 15 main fiords. The unique climate, topography, bathymetry and oceanography, in addition to limited access and infrastructure, make marine pollution response inherently difficult. Recent increases in cruise ship and commercial maritime activity has increased the spill risk, especially for fuel oil. Information previously gathered from interest/advocate groups and government agencies was used to identify priority resources and summarise the spill risk. Then, at a 1-day workshop, six experts in Fiordland ecology, spill response and ERA processes defined the most ecologically important areas and priority resources across the region, and their susceptibility to oil. Levels of concern were applied to each area and identified resource, and the preferred response options and their feasibility defined. Outputs were presented on a series of planning maps and site sheets completed for each priority area after the workshop which were circulated for stakeholder review. The approach enabled a defensible response plan to be generated quickly and cheaply. It secured input from agencies who would not have participated had a greater time input been required and generated a concise document for public consultation and a template for ongoing refinement. The success of the approach was due largely to the high level of trust between scientific and response agencies in NZ, and a shared desire to rapidly improve response planning outcomes. Disadvantages were the inability to fully review and include all available technical information, limited public consultation, and tight time pressures. Examples are given of the benefit of the plan following its use during a recent spill of marine diesel.
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Pearce *, Douglas G., and Raewyn Tan. "Distribution channels for heritage and cultural tourism in New Zealand." Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research 9, no. 3 (September 2004): 225–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1094166042000290637.

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Hall, C. Michael, and Rachel Piggin. "Tourism business knowledge of World Heritage sites: a New Zealand case study." International Journal of Tourism Research 4, no. 5 (2002): 401–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jtr.391.

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Trinh, Thu Thi, and Chris Ryan. "Visitors to Heritage Sites." Journal of Travel Research 56, no. 1 (August 4, 2016): 67–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0047287515626305.

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Any tourist evaluation of place is partly shaped by the tourist’s own culture, and this may be even more so when the site gazed upon is representative of a different culture and/or heritage. However, this article suggests that differences of evaluations may be overemphasized if the research concentrates solely on the variable of nationality. The physical characteristics of place, the interpretation offered, and possibly other features such as the level of crowding all have a role to play. The common experience of these factors by tourists of different nationalities may create a commonality of evaluation despite differences in tourists’ cultures. The study reported here of more than 200 respondents uses textual analysis to find similarities and differences between Australian, Chinese, German, and New Zealand visitors to a Maori cultural site in New Zealand.
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Hede, Anne-Marie. "World Heritage Listing and the Evolving Issues Related to Tourism and Heritage: Cases from Australia and New Zealand." Journal of Heritage Tourism 2, no. 3 (January 2008): 133–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2167/jht055.0.

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Mackay, Michael, Tracy Nelson, and Harvey C. Perkins. "Agritourism and the adaptive re-use of farm buildings in New Zealand." Open Agriculture 4, no. 1 (September 10, 2019): 465–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/opag-2019-0047.

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AbstractThis paper reports findings from a study of the adaptive re-purposing of farm buildings for a wide array of agritourism activities. The research is being conducted in New Zealand where the international visitor sector is thriving. In response, an increasing number of farmers are attempting to boost their farm incomes by adding tourism ventures to their business portfolios. In doing so, many of them are using and preserving rural cultural heritage, particularly old agricultural and other rural buildings, while also diversifying farm activity. This element of agritourism therefore has an important role in the protection and adaptive re-use of farm buildings, farm landscape change, and the creation of new value and values in the countryside. In the cases we have studied, this entrepreneurial activity is largely farmer-driven and undertaken with some, but limited, financial support from central and local government. In considering the policy implications of our work, we call for the provision of advisory services to facilitate and enable New Zealand farmers to create profitable and sustainable high-quality tourism services that simultaneously preserve farm buildings.
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J. C. Currey, Rohan, Stephen M. Dawson, and Elisabeth Slooten. "New abundance estimates suggest Doubtful Sound bottlenose dolphins are declining." Pacific Conservation Biology 13, no. 4 (2007): 274. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/pc070274.

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The bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.) of Doubtful Sound, Fiordland, New Zealand, live at the southern limit of the species' worldwide range. They are subject to impacts from tourism and habitat modification. Photographic resightings of individually distinctive dolphins were gathered from 19 225 dorsal fin photographs taken during systematic surveys of the fiord. Field effort spanned nine seasons from summer 2004/2005 to summer 2006/2007, including 142 days on the water. Both capture-recapture and census approaches were taken in analysis. A total of 71 individuals were observed over the study period (54 adults, sub-adults and calves more than one year old and 17 newborn calves). Births were seasonal, occurring in the Austral summer and autumn, with calf survival (9 survivors of 17 births) lower than observed for this population in the past. Individual dolphins were resighted frequently within and across seasons, confirming the group is resident within the fiord year-round. Fifty-six bottlenose dolphins (CV=1.0%) were resident in Doubtful Sound in summer 2006/2007. Comparison with prior abundance estimates (for adults and sub-adults) indicates an apparent population decline of 34?39% over the past 12 years. This apparent decline suggests that precautionary management of human impacts is vital for the dolphins' long-term survival.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland"

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Willson, Gregory Brian. "International Tourists' Experiences of the Heritage Buildings in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand." The University of Waikato, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/2227.

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There has been increased attention given in the tourism literature to experiential perspectives of tourism. This thesis addresses the lack of attention in previous experiential studies to the relationship between heritage buildings and tourism. Specifically, this thesis explores the influence of heritage buildings in shaping international tourists' experiences of a particular region of New Zealand: Hawke's Bay. This research sought insight into the specific attributes of heritage buildings that influenced the experiences of international tourists visiting the region, and examined the relative importance of heritage buildings for international tourism to Hawke's Bay, as perceived by international tourists visiting the region. In this way, results are assumed in the personal constructs of individual consumers (Beeho Prentice, 1997; Prentice, Witt Hamer, 1998; McIntosh Siggs, 2005). An increased understanding of the relationship between heritage buildings and tourism is essential in strengthening support for preservation, for product development and promotion. A mixed-methodology comprising of 50 semi-structured interviews, 66 photograph-supported interviews and 354 structured questionnaires was adopted. Hawke's Bay's heritage buildings were found to have an important influence on tourists' experiences of the region, visually and as part of the narratives of their reported experiences. Attributes of Hawke's Bay's heritage buildings that influenced tourists' experiences of the region included their architecture, exterior and interior design, colour, history and associated stories. Furthermore, the interviews elicited three key experiential themes that emerged from respondents' narratives of their experiences in Hawke's Bay. They are; 'visual appeal', 'personal reflections' and 'engaging experiences'. Specifically, it was found that a townscape is not a passive space. Heritage buildings render the townscape an experiential place filled with emotion, mindfulness, engagement, and imbued with personal meaning. Visitors in effect created their own experiences through their active interaction with the environment; rendering it relevant to a context they were personally interested in, or which held personal significance for them. Analysis of the questionnaires revealed that, as perceived by international tourists, heritage buildings are important to a region; a significant proportion of respondents indicated that they would theoretically be willing to pay some money to ensure the preservation of Hawke's Bay's heritage buildings. This thesis evidences the important relationship between heritage buildings and tourism, and future research is advocated to advance upon the conclusions made in this research.
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McDermott, Marie-Louise. "Wet, wild and convivial : past, present and future contributions of Australia’s ocean pools to surf, beach, pool and body cultures and recreational coasts." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2012. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/517.

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I investigated the past, present and possible futures of Australia’s ocean pools, over a hundred public seawater pools sited on rocky surfcoasts, so that waves wash over their walls. My interdisciplinary analysis informed by actor-­‐network theory explored their contributions to surf, beach, pool and body cultures and recreational coasts. Ocean pools have since the nineteenth century been far more significant in the surf, beach, pool and body cultures of Australia and South Africa, than in those of Britain and the United States. Most of Australia’s ocean pools lie within state of New South Wales, and my work strengthens the case for recognising Australian and NSW ocean pools as having distinct collective identities and affinities with their South African counterparts. Ocean pools are sites of social and environmental learning that challenge efforts to establish human mastery over wild natures and depictions of coastal environments as mere stages for enacting human activities unconstrained by non-­‐human nature. They also challenge the notion that people prefer to swim and bathe at patrolled beaches or in private or public pools far less wild than an ocean pool. They are evidence that supervision by suitably trained and equipped lifeguards or lifesavers is not the only or the most satisfactory way to adequately safeguard bathers and swimmers from the dangers of the sea. Australia’s ocean pools demonstrate that regardless of race, class, gender, age or ability, people can and do make themselves at home in pools shared convivially with wild nature and well-­‐suited for sustained, unsupervised recreation and sport on rocky surfcoast. Ocean pools serve as places of refuge, therapeutic and restorative environments, adventure playgrounds, convivial public spaces, visually appealing cultural landscapes, brands, icons and symbols. Australia’s ocean pools are unified by their sites, their affordances and core actor-­‐ networks linked to their fundamental and enduring identity as ‘wild but safe enough surfside pools’. Rocky shores and coastal waters characterised by surf, sharks and rips are among the most persistent macro-­‐actors in these networks that include bathers, swimmers, tourism and transport networks, news media, local councils and progress associations. Australian ocean pools that gained a further identity as ‘public pools for competition and carnivals’ acquired additional actor-­‐networks strongly linked since the late nineteenth century to amateur swimming clubs and schools, and since the twentieth century to surf lifesaving clubs and winter swimming clubs. Those ocean pools nevertheless, remained predominately recreational facilities. As other types of public pools became more affordable, Australia’s ocean pools remained popular despite gaining new identities as an ‘unusually hazardous type of public pool’ and ‘a type of facility no longer created’. The growing threats to ocean pools and their actor-­‐networks are a further unifying factor. As sport and recreation venues cultivating healthy, convivial relationships with wild nature and possessing unrealised potential as centres for community engagement, learning and research, ocean pools are worth emulating on other rocky shores and in other public places. My work strengthens efforts to sustain and create ocean pools and supports further studies on seawater pools and their actor-­‐networks.
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Willson, Greg. "International tourists' experiences of the heritage buildings in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand /." 2006. http://adt.waikato.ac.nz/public/adt-uow20060615.135352/index.html.

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Cave, Jenny. "Between world views nascent Pacific tourism enterprise in New Zealand /." 2009. http://adt.waikato.ac.nz/public/adt-uow20090812.153718/index.html.

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Donaghey, Sara. "Valuing our place : a critical exploration of frameworks for assessing the significance of New Zealand's historic heritage : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Management at Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand." 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10179/1539.

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Content removed due to copyright restriction; Donaghey, S. (2000). A fading landscape: strategies for managing the cultural heritage resource. Archaeology in New Zealand, 43(4), 270-282. Donaghey, S. (2001). What is aught,but as 'tis valued? An analysis of strategies for the assessment of cultural heritage significance in New Zealand. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 7(4), 365-380.
This thesis argues that considerations of value and significance are fundamental to sustainable heritage management practice. It explores critical issues relating to the valorisation of historic heritage in New Zealand and considers whether existing frameworks for evaluation and assessment are effective and appropriate. The rationale for the research proposes that achievable and effective outcomes for historic heritage only occur in the context of rigorous evaluation and assessment frameworks. Theoretical and pragmatic frames of reference drive key lines of reasoning. The two frames of reference comprise: firstly, theoretical principles relating to the nature and qualities of heritage value and secondly, operational strategies relating to the process of assessment. The thesis integrates current policy and practice within existing epistemology with primary research data using a mixed methodology. A review of international policy and practice contrasts the various approaches used in Australia, Canada, England and the United States of America, and identifies effective system characteristics. Existing understandings and practice within New Zealand are considered and analogies made between particular elements of the primary research drawn from surveys of professional and non-professional opinion of the heritage assessment process. The New Zealand findings are then set against the review of international evidence and the literature to identify significant strengths and shortcomings. It is argued that New Zealand currently lacks suitable frameworks within which appropriate concepts of value and effective strategies for significance assessment are meaningfully integrated. Expressions of the nature and qualities of historic heritage must be reformulated in ways that afford greater recognition to principles of social value and the holistic, multivalent properties of the resource. Moreover, identified deficiencies in matters of community engagement, consistency, resourcing, local authority process and the recognition of indigenous rights, undermine the effectiveness of operational strategies for assessment and require attention.
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Books on the topic "Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland"

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Park), World Heritage Managers Workshop (2000 Tongariro National. Proceedings of the World Heritage Managers Workshop: Tongariro National Park, New Zealand, 26-30 October 2000. Wellington, N.Z: Dept of Conservation, 2001.

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Horn, Chrys. Looking back at Te Tāpoitanga Māori: Overview of a participatory research programme on rural Māori tourism development. Lincoln, N.Z: Manaaki Whenua Press, Landcare Research, 2009.

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Walsh, Bernadine M. Ritual reality? - indigenous participation and its role in cultural sustainability and authenticity in a tourismproduct: A socio-cultural analysis of Maori cultural heritage tourism operation in New Zealand. [Guildford]: [University of Surrey], 1994.

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Hall, Michael. Heritage Management in New Zealand. 2nd ed. OUP Australia and New Zealand, 1999.

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Heritage Management in New Zealand and Australia: Visitor Management, Interpretation, and Marketing. Oxford University Press, USA, 1993.

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1961-, Hall Colin Michael, McArthur Simon, and New Zealand Natural Heritage Foundation., eds. Heritage management in New Zealand and Australia: Visitor management, interpretation and marketing. Auckland, New Zealand: Oxford University Press, 1993.

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Untamed Coast: Auckland's Waitakere Ranges and Heritage Area. Exisle Publishing Pty Limited, 2012.

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Proceedings of the World Heritage Managers Workshop: Tongariro National Park, New Zealand, 26-30 October 2000. Dept of Conservation, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland"

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Reis, Arianne C., and Carla Jellum. "7. New Zealand Rail Trails: Heritage Tourism Attractions and Rural Communities." In Railway Heritage and Tourism, edited by Michael V. Conlin and Geoffrey R. Bird, 90–104. Bristol, Blue Ridge Summit: Multilingual Matters, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21832/9781845414399-011.

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Legget, J., and S. Histen. "Visiting with a mission(ary) - engaging with stakeholders at New Zealand heritage sites." In Spiritual and religious tourism : motivations and management, 122–34. Wallingford: CABI, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781786394163.0122.

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Zhang, Guojie, James Higham, and Julia Nina Albrecht. "(Re)creating natural heritage in New Zealand." In Creating Heritage for Tourism, 243–57. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203701881-20.

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Newsome, David, and Ross K. Dowling. "The future of geotourism where to from here." In Geotourism: the tourism of geology and landscape. Goodfellow Publishers, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/978-1-906884-09-3-1073.

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Geotourism is on the rise the world over. Governments, tourism businesses, geological organizations, community groups, conservationists, NGOs, and individuals are seeking a future for the protection of our geological heritage and community advancement through sustainable tourism development. Countries as far apart as New Zealand and Iceland, USA and China, are getting involved and lifting our knowledge on geology and landscape, through interpretation and education. The future is exciting for geotourism as evidenced by the increased interest in geological awareness, the phenomenal rise of the Geopark Movement, and the rising interest in geotourism as a tool for conservation of our geoheritage.
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Conference papers on the topic "Heritage tourism New Zealand Fiordland"

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Abdul Razak, Norhanim. "FROM CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE TO A WHALE RIDER: EXPLORING TRADITIONAL TALES IN THE DIGITAL PROMOTION OF NEW ZEALAND." In GLOBAL TOURISM CONFERENCE 2021. PENERBIT UMT, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46754/gtc.2021.11.027.

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The paper applied a content analysis method to examine how myths and legends have been employed by the promotional organization in portraying New Zealand on the official tourism website. The assessment of the website uncovered six main legends which have been presented in the promotion of New Zealand to potential tourists. These traditional tales have been incorporated into the website chiefly as part of Maori heritage attributes in which purakau (the Maori term for legends) represents among crucial aspects in understanding their worldviews and cultural identities. Legends narrating fishing voyages involving demi gods offers a mythological explanation of the origin of the geological formation of islands of New Zealand were presented more than once on the website. Among the legends presented to readers on the websites encompass stories of Tane Mahuta, which depicts the tale of the sky father, the earth mother, and the creation of the world of light that humans live in today. Another unique legend, Paikea the whale rider, is featured as part of the description of a whale-watching attraction in Kaikoura, Christchurch. The overall analysis uncovered that legendary tales are incorporated into the website as the part historical origin of Maori people and in the promotion of several tourist attractions in New Zealand. From a tourism perspective, the representation of these tales enhances the appeal of destinations and make them stand out to visitors. The inclusion of the purakau offers tourists a deeper understanding of the cultural heritage of this country. Furthermore, Maori worldviews on the creation of the universe and formation of the natural environment are transpired. It is noticeable through these legends that Maori people strongly respect their ancestors and highly appreciated natural resources. Finally, the emphasis on environmental conservation and sustainability as ingrained in the tales further supported the overall promotional tagline of 100% Pure New Zealand and the inclusion of Tiaki Promise a commitment to care for New Zealand, for now, and for future generations on the official tourism website.
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