Tourism, Mobility and Second Homes: Between Elite Landscape and Common Ground

Front Cover
C. Michael Hall, Dieter K. Müller
Channel View Publications, Jul 27, 2004 - Business & Economics - 292 pages

Second homes - the cottage, the summer house, the bach - are an important part of the tourism and leisure lifestyles of many people in the developed world. Second homes are therefore an integral component of tourism experiences in rural and peripheral areas. Yet, despite their significance not only for tourism but also for rural communities and the rural economy, relatively little research has been undertaken on the topic until recent times. This volume represents the first major international analysis and review of second homes for over 25 years. It will provide a significant resource for those interested in changing patterns of tourism and leisure behaviour as well as the use of the countryside and peripheral areas. The book describes the economic, social and environmental impacts of second homes as well as their planning implications and places such discussions within the context of contemporary human mobility. The volume represents essential reading for those interested in rural regional development processes and the development of new rural leisure landscapes.

 

Contents

Second Home Tourism Impact Planning and Management
15
Between Tourists
75
Shifting Nodes
97
A Case Study of Second
113
Development
133
Recreational Second Homes in the South West of Western
149
Second Homes and Coastal Tourism in South
162
Reflections on an Unexplored Phenomenon
196
Second Homes in Spain
215
Second Homes as a Part of a New Rural Lifestyle in Norway
233
Second Home Plans Among Second Home Owners in Northern
261
Index
303
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2004)

Michael Hall is Professor of Tourism at the University of Otago, New Zealand.

Dieter K. Müller is Associate Professor, Department of Social and Economic Geography, Umeå University, Sweden. Both authors have research interests with respect to tourism and regional development, mobility, and tourism in peripheral areas.

Bibliographic information