ABSTRACT
Tourism studies are showing an increasing interest in the analysis of environmental sustainability and responsibility in the Anthropocene epoch. In the Higher Education (HE) Tourism studies, new concepts and skills are incorporated helping students to develop environmental knowledge and responsible attitudes and behaviours grounded in closer associations between the Earth systems and Humanity. The aim of this study is to examine the extent to which environmental education is incorporated in the curricula of Tourism studies at 55 Spanish universities throughout a syllabus content analysis.
The results evidence that HE Tourism studies in Spain has a generalist orientation because of the holistic vision inherent to that courses, whereas matters regarding environmental issues would be necessary to organise in a more coherent way in the form of specialised training tracks devoted to environmental education including both sustainability and responsibility issues.
Acknowledgments
The authors of this paper wish to thank José Carlos García-Rosell and Emily Höckert of Lapland University and the two anonymous reviewers for their critical comments of this study and their insightful advice and suggestions.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1. https://skillspanorama.cedefop.europa.eu/en/glossary/e (Retrieved: March 2020)
2. https://www.unideusto.org/tuningeu/images/stories/documents/General_Brochure_Spanish_version.pdf (Retrieved: March 2020)