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Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Fragilités de la spécialisation touristique »
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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Fragilités de la spécialisation touristique"
Dorlhiac, Renaud. « L’Albanie ou les trompeuses apparences ». Questions internationales 102, no 1 (23 juillet 2020) : 99–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/quin.102.0099.
Texte intégralCollen, Jacques V. A. « La spécialisation “Gestion touristique” à l'Ecole Supérieure d'Hôtellerie de Maestricht (Pays‐Bas) ». Tourist Review 45, no 4 (avril 1990) : 28–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eb058054.
Texte intégralLogossah, Kinvi, et Marie-Antoinette MAUPERTUIS. « La spécialisation touristique des petites économies insulaires en développement est-elle une voie de croissance durable ? » Revue d'Économie Régionale & ; Urbaine mai, no 1 (2007) : 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/reru.071.0035.
Texte intégralBachimon, Philippe, Pierre Derioz et Vincent Vlès. « Quelle place pour les patrimoines culturels et paysagers dans le développement touristique de la Cerdagne (Pyrénées, France) ? Rémanences, fragilités contemporaines et interrogations sur la durabilité du modèle ». Collection EDYTEM. Cahiers de géographie 14, no 1 (2013) : 15–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/edyte.2013.1220.
Texte intégralThèses sur le sujet "Fragilités de la spécialisation touristique"
Sihabutr, Chaturaporn. « Technologie et spécialisation internationale touristique ». Phd thesis, Université Toulouse le Mirail - Toulouse II, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00714379.
Texte intégralAlmonord, Jean Sergo. « Haïti et la CARICOM : essais sur les limites et le potentiel de l'intégration économique ». Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2024. https://pepite-depot.univ-lille.fr/ToutIDP/EDSESAM/2024/2024ULILA007.pdf.
Texte intégralAfter an extensive introduction on Haiti and CARICOM, this thesis comprises three essays in international economics aimed at shedding light on the issues and potential of the country and the region.The first essay is a critical discussion of David Ricardo's classical theory of comparative advantage, examining the role of income disparities in international trade. By breaking free from the commonly adopted restrictive assumption of "homothetic preferences," which pos-its that households allocate a constant fraction of their income to the purchase of each good or service they consume, the significance of demand (and thus of income distribution) in explaining trade flows is reaffirmed. A simple model demonstrates that a low-income coun-try can be excluded from trade despite its comparative advantages, even in the absence of trade barriers such as tariffs or transportation costs.Countries still dominated by subsistence agriculture tend to have a low level of openness because most of their production is consumed locally, and foreign-produced consumer goods remain inaccessible to them. In contrast, countries specializing in tourism services tend to have a high level of openness because they export these services to finance the importation of much of their food and consumer goods, which are not locally produced. In summary, re-gardless of their size, the level of economic openness of low-income countries depends largely on their specialization.Another crucial implication of the model is that only the wealthiest countries can truly bene-fit from the advantages of international trade. Trade appears as a driver of divergence rather than convergence because, in some cases, it tends to exacerbate inequalities between nations. Some countries benefit from global growth while others, despite their geographical proximi-ty, seem to drift away irreversibly.The second essay underscores the vulnerabilities arising from the tourism specialization of many Caribbean countries. Although this specialization has allowed them to benefit from the growth of wealthy countries, it also exposes them to all shocks that may affect this sector. The Covid-19 pandemic tragically revealed this fragility, as evidenced by the clear decline in GDP directly related to the importance of tourism in each of these countries. Caribbean economies were directly affected by travel restrictions imposed by tourists' countries of origin, without having a say. Thus, in addition to the fragility inherently linked to specializa-tion, these countries found themselves largely deprived of their sovereignty in economic pol-icy matters, which is particularly problematic when there is a divergence of interest.The third essay explores a potential avenue for Haiti's development. Despite CARICOM's stated intentions, intra-community trade remains very limited, and the expected benefits of the Chaguaramas agreements have yet to materialize. Caribbean countries have few com-plementarities and could be nothing more than competing tourist destinations without con-nections if they did not benefit from the visibility provided by belonging to the Caribbean community at the international level. We argue that Haitian craftsmanship could enrich the region's tourism industry. Haiti has a clear comparative advantage in this field due to its abundant workforce compared to other countries in the region. It could thus benefit from the successful tourism industry of its neighbors, as these countries have every interest in promot-ing a more cultural, profitable, and sustainable form of tourism than mass tourism
Perrain, David. « Le tourisme dans les petites économies insulaires : analyse des fondamentaux de la spécialisation touristique comme source soutenable de croissance ». Thesis, La Réunion, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018LARE0015/document.
Texte intégralTourism has become a social, cultural and economic phenomenon. However, the impact of tourism on a long-term economy growth remains ambiguous, especially for small island economies (SIE).This thesis seeks to identify the fundamentals of tourism specialization as a sustainable source of growth for a SIE. On the one hand, it has led us to redefine the main components of tourism as a social and economic activity and to clarify how tourism contributes to the economic growth. On the other hand, this thesis reveals the ambiguity of the relationship between tourism and growth. It provides new explanations for a more virtuous tourism growth model and more adapted to the global tourism market.The results of the introduction of tourism into a Romer's model of endogenous growth and those of a threshold regression model applied to a sample of SEI call into question the hypothesis of linearity between tourist specialization and economic growth. The thesis demonstrates the end of a model of intensive tourist development. It concludes that tourism is a sustainable source of growth for an SIE, when intelligence and agility constitute the leitmotif of a sustainable, multi-stakeholder tourism strategy
Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Fragilités de la spécialisation touristique"
Nédélec, Pascale. « Chapitre IV. Le poids de la spécialisation touristique sur l’urbanité et la citadinité végasiennes ». Dans Las Vegas dans l’ombre des casinos, 111–48. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.141917.
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