Could digital nomads be an important growth segment for student travel? (original) (raw)
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Tourism Facing a Pandemic: From Crisis to Recovery , 2020
This collection of papers has been written by the international team of scholars teaching at the Master Course in Planning and Management of Tourism Systems of the University of Bergamo, while the Covid-19 emergency was spreading in all parts of the World and especially in the territory of Bergamo. The main aim of the work is to face the topic of Tourism in the case of exogenous shocks, like the Covid-19 pandemic, reflecting on their impacts on territories, communities and heritage both during and after the crisis. The papers adopt different disciplinary approaches and methods, trying to give a multi-focused gaze to the complexity of a global phenomenon and to possible forms of recovery. Raffaella Pulejo's papers (pp.243-250), focuses on some contemporary art practices which are based on local ground and reshape the notion of space, time and social interaction. Against the background of big international events, typical in the contemporary art system and now forbidden, artists' works might suggest new paths in the tourism domain.
Tourism Facing a Pandemic. From Crisis to Recovery
University of Bergamo, 2020
This collection of papers has been written by the international team of scholars teaching at the Master Course in Planning and Management of Tourism Systems of the University of Bergamo, while the Covid-19 emergency was spreading in all parts of the World and especially in the territory of Bergamo. The main aim of the work is to face the topic of Tourism in the case of exogenous shocks, like the Covid-19 pandemic, reflecting on their impacts on territories, communities and heritage both during and after the crisis. The papers adopt different disciplinary approaches and methods, trying to give a multi-focused gaze to the complexity of a global phenomenon and to possible forms of recovery. This collection is addressed to students and researchers studying in the tourism sector, who are in search of answers in this time of change and crisis. We believe that after reading this volume they won't have all the answers to their dilemmas, but they will reflect about them, they will receive proposals for specific approaches, methodologies, sources, references, examples, useful for the future of their own research.
The new global nomads: Youth travel in a globalizing world
2015
Increasing youth travel has led to young people being labelled as ‘nomads’. This paper examines the phenomenon of youth nomadism in the tourism literature as well as examining recent empirical evidence. A review of the literature around youth nomadism identifies two major themes: analyses of the growth and development of youth travel niches, such as backpacking, volunteer tourism and educational exchange, and broader approaches linked to the rise of the mobilities paradigm. A major global survey of youth travel (34,000 respondents) indicates three major travel styles related to different forms of ‘nomadism’: the backpacker, the flashpacker and the global nomad. The traditional backpacker can be seen as a form of ‘neo-tribe’, gathering in self-sufficient enclaves. In contrast, the flashpacker, or ‘digital nomad', utilizes existing digital and logistic infrastructure to maintain a fluid, individualized lifestyle. The global nomad, or ‘location independent traveller’, tries to integrate with the local community, while trying to avoid the strictures of ‘system’.
The New Global Nomads Cartoon Version
Tourism Recreation Research, 2015
A new interpretation of the paper The New Global Nomads: Youth travel in a globalising world (Tourism Recreation Research, 2015).
WYSE Travel Confederation/UNWTO report on the youth travel sector. A new version is due to be published in late 2016
ProQuest LLC, 2010
Backpackers are pioneers of mobility, who provide a unique domain for critical tourism research. The lineage of backpacker ideals, including pursuit of authentic experiences, independence, escape and social interaction, can be traced back to the 'tramps' of the 1880s and the 'drifters' of the 1970s. The recent emergence of the 'flashpacker' suggests a cultural divergence from 'traditional backpackers'. Flashpackers are 'digital nomads', members of a 'new global elite' that symbolize the ongoing convergence in society of technology, physical travel, and daily life. The enduring ideals, history of mobility and the emerging flashpacker subgroup provides a rich context from which to the study the relationship between contemporary society, tourism and technology. This dissertation represents a critical turn in backpacker research, building upon the perception of backpacking phenomenon as a metaphor for the complex mobilities of the global contemporary culture. The New Mobilities Paradigm provides the theoretical and methodological basis for this study. Cultural Consensus Analysis from the field of cognitive anthropology was applied in the analysis of the backpacking culture and the apparent emergence of the flashpacker subculture. A survey was administered in Facebook backpacker groups, in Cairns, Australia, and key informant flashpackers (n=493). Findings from the CCA suggest that backpackers share a common cultural model and that flashpackers and non-flashpackers do not operate from separate cultural models. The findings suggest that even though flashpackers appear to be an emerging independent subculture, they in fact share the same cultural ideals of traditional backpackers. The only major difference is the usage and importance of technology for flashpackers. This study further examined the virtual spaces of backpacking through a mobile-virtual ethnography and in-depth e-interviews with eight flashpackers. Findings provide important insight into the usage and meanings associated with social media for backpackers, the virtual infrastructure of the backpacker culture, and the role of social media as a mediator of the backpacking experience. Micro and macro level analysis of the virtualization of backpacker culture are examined through the conceptualization of the virtual backpacking spaces via the notion of the blogosphere and statusphere and through the analysis of the socio-technographics backpacker behavior.
Lifestyle travellers and self-development
‘Lifestyle travellers’ is the name coined by Dr Scott A. Cohen to describe this ‘distinctive subtype within backpacker tourism’ for whom travel is a ‘way of life’. This lifestyle involves, primarily, individuals travelling the world with no plans of returning home. They have rejected the corporate career ladder and switched to temporary jobs abroad and/or self-employed online work. They have discarded most of their possessions. In sum, they have left their sedentary lifestyle to adopt a mobile one. Drilling into Dr Cohen’s research, where he cites in broad terms anomie and self-actualisation as travel motivations before embarking on constructionist discourse, this paper fills in the gap by examining the emic perspective via blogs. It identifies specific push-pull factors and frames them within existential works of anthropology, sociology, philosophy, and psychology to provide a multilayered, holistic understanding of lifestyle travellers. Before its conclusion, comparisons are drawn between lifestyle travellers and late colonial Tswana peoples. Ultimately, it reveals lifestyle travellers’ raison d'être is self-development framed within a Western conception of being ‘fully human’.
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