984
Views
16
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Boundary-work and sustainability in tourism enclaves

Pages 507-526 | Received 28 Aug 2014, Accepted 05 Aug 2015, Published online: 16 Dec 2015

References

  • Adorno, R. (1996). La Estatua de Gonzalo Guerrero en Akumal: Iconos Culturales y la Reactualizacion del Pasado Colonial. [The statue of Gonzalo Guerrero in Akumal: Cultural icons and reupdates of the colonial past]. Revista Iberoamericana, 62(176–177), 905–923.
  • Akkerman, S.F., & Bakker, A. (2011). Boundary crossing and boundary objects. Review of Educational Research, 81(2), 132–169.
  • Anderson, B.O'G. (1991) Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: Verso
  • Andrews, A.P., & Jones, G.D. (2001). Asentamientos Coloniales en la Costa de Quintana Roo. Temas Antropológicos, 23(1), 20–35.
  • Ateljevic, I., Pritchard, A., & Morgan, N. (2007). The critical turn in tourism studies: Innovative research methodologies. Oxford: Elsevier.
  • Basit, T. (2003). Manual or electronic? The role of coding in qualitative data analysis. Educational Research, 45, 143–154.
  • Bianchi, R.V. (2003). Place and power in tourism development: Tracing the complex articulations of community and locality. Pasos Revista de Turismo y Patrimonio, 1(1), 13–32.
  • Bianchi, R., & Stephenson, M. (2014). Tourism and citizenship: Rights, freedoms and responsibilities in the global order. London: Routledge
  • Bramwell, B. (2011). Governance, the state and sustainable tourism: A political economy approach. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 19, 459–477.
  • Bramwell, B., & Lane, B. (2014). The “critical turn” and its implications for sustainable tourism research. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 22(1), 1–8.
  • Brenner, L., & Aguilar, A.G. (2002). Luxury tourism and regional economic development in Mexico. The Professional Geographer, 54, 500–520.
  • Brohman, J. (1996). New directions in tourism for third world development. Annals of Tourism Research, 23(1), 48–70.
  • Bunnell, T., Muzaini, H., & Sidaway, J.D. (2006). Global city frontiers: Singapore's Hinterland and the contested socio-political geographies of Bintan, Indonesia. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 30(1), 3–22.
  • Buzinde, C.N., & Manuel-Navarrete, D. (2013). The social production of space in tourism enclaves: Mayan children's perceptions of tourism boundaries. Annals of Tourism Research, 43, 482–505.
  • Carlisle, S., & Jones, E. (2012). The beach enclave: A landscape of power. Tourism Management Perspectives, 1, 9–16.
  • Church, A., & Coles, T. (Eds.), 2007. Tourism, power and space. London: Routledge.
  • Clark, W.C., Tomich, T.P., van Noordwijk, M., Guston, D., Catacutan, D., Dickson, N.M., & McNie, E. (2011). Boundary work for sustainable development: Natural resource management at the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [Epub ahead of print]. doi:10.1073/pnas.0900231108
  • Crouch, D. (2007). The power of the tourist encounter. In A. Church, & T. Coles (Eds.), Tourism, power and space (pp. 45–62). London: Routledge.
  • Dredge, D., & Jamal, T. (2013). Mobilities on the Gold Coast, Australia: Implications for destination governance and sustainable tourism. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 21, 557–579.
  • Edensor, T. (1998). Tourists at the Taj: Performance and meaning at a symbolic site. London: Routledge.
  • Edensor, T. (2000). Staging tourism: Tourists as performers. Annals of Tourism Research, 27, 322–344.
  • Edensor, T. (2001). Performing tourism, staging tourism: (Re)producing tourist space and practice. Tourist Studies, 1, 59–81.
  • Edensor, T. (2007). Mundane mobilities, performances and spaces of tourism. Social & Cultural Geography, 8, 199–215.
  • Farriss, N.M. (1984). Maya society under colonial rule: The collective enterprise of survival. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  • Freitag, T.G. (1994). Enclave tourism development: For whom the benefits roll?. Annals of Tourism Research, 21, 538–554.
  • Gerhard, P. (1993). The southeast frontier of New Spain: Revised edition. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Gibson, C. (2009). Geographies of tourism: Critical research on capitalism and local livelihoods. Progress in Human Geography, 33, 527–534.
  • Gobierno de Quintana Roo. (1975). Permiso por el que se concede a la Promotora Akumal Caribe SA autorización para fraccionar los terrenos de su propiedad conocidos Akumal Norte y Akumal Sur", [Permit to authorize the Developer Akumal Caribe SA to divide the plots of its property known as North Akumal and South Akumal]. In: Periódico Oficial del Gobierno del Estado de Quintana Roo, Primera Época, 3, 20. Estado de Quintana Roo: Chetumal.
  • Goffman, E. (1959). The presentation of self in everyday life. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
  • Guston, D.H. (2001). Boundary organizations in environmental policy and science: An introduction. Science, Technology & Human Values, 26, 399–408.
  • Hannam, K., Butler, G., & Paris, C.M. (2014). Developments and key issues in tourism mobilities. Annals of Tourism Research, 44, 171–185.
  • Hervick, P. (1999). Mayan people within and beyond boundaries. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers.
  • Higgins-Desbiolles, F. (2010). The elusiveness of sustainability in tourism: The culture-ideology of consumerism and its implications. Tourism and Hospitality Research, 10(2), 116–115.
  • hooks, b. (2004). Choosing the margin as a space of radical openness. In S. Harding (Ed.), The feminist standpoint theory reader: Intellectual and political controversies (pp. 153–159). New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Jamal, T., & Camargo, B.A. (2014). Sustainable tourism, justice and an ethic of care: Toward the just destination. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 22(1), 11–30.
  • Jasanoff, S., (1987). Contested boundaries in policy-relevant science. Social Studies of Science, 17(2), 195–230.
  • Jones, G.D. (1998). The conquest of the Mayas of Yucatan and maya resistance during the Spanish colonial period. In P. Schmidt, M. de la Garza, & E. Nalda (Eds.), Maya (pp. 483–494). New York: Rizzoli.
  • Jones, R. (2008). Categories, borders and boundaries. Progress in Human Geography, 33(2), 174–189.
  • Joseph, G.M. (1985). From caste war to class war: The historiography of modern Yucatán (c. 1750–1940). The Hispanic American Historical Review, 65(1), 111–134.
  • Kermath, B.M., & Thomas, R.N. (1992). Spatial dynamics of resorts. sosua, dominican republic. Annals of Tourism Research, 19, 173–190.
  • Kingsbury, P. (2011). Sociospatial sublimation: The human resources of love in Sandals Resorts International, Jamaica. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 101, 650–669.
  • Kray, C.A. (2006). Resistance to what? How?: Stalled social movements in Cancun. City & Society, 18(1), 66–89.
  • Lamont, M., & Molnár, V. (2002). The study of boundaries in the social sciences. Annual Review of Sociology, 28, 167–195.
  • Lefebvre, H. (1991). The production of space. Oxford: Blackwell.
  • MacCannell, D. (1973). Staged authenticity: Arrangements of social space in tourist settings. American Journal of Sociology, 79, 589–603.
  • Manuel-Navarrete, D. (2012a). The ideology of growth, tourism and self-alienation in Akumal, Mexico. In M. Pelling, D. Manuel-Navarrete, & M. Redclift (Eds.), Climate change and the crisis of capitalism: A chance to reclaim self, society and nature (pp. 143–156). London: Routledge.
  • Manuel-Navarrete, D. (2012b). Entanglements of power and spatial inequalities in tourism in the Mexican Caribbean. (Working Paper No. 17). Berlin: desiguALdades.net.
  • Manuel-Navarrete, D., Pelling, M., & Redclift, M. (2011). Critical adaptation to hurricanes in the Mexican Caribbean: Development visions, governance structures, and coping strategies. Global Environmental Change, 21, 249–258.
  • Manuel-Navarrete, D., & Redclift, M. (2012). Spaces of consumerism and the consumption of space: Tourism and social exclusion in the “Mayan Riviera”. In A. Petierra, & J. Sinclair (Eds.), Consumer culture in Latin America (pp. 177–194). New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Manuel-Navarrete, D., & Pelling, M. (2015). Subjectivity and the politics of transformation in response to development and environmental change. Global Environmental Change.doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.08.012
  • Massey, D. (2000). Entanglements of power. Reflections. In J.P. Sharp, P. Routledge, C. Philo, & R. Paddison (Eds.), Entanglements of power: Geographies of domination/resistance (pp. 279–286). London: Routledge.
  • May Correa, J. (2003). Bush: una vida de aventuras. Revista Pioneros de Quintana Roo, 10. URL: Accessed August 2011. Revista Pioneros. Retrieved from http://www.revistapioneros.com/2008/11/20/pablo-bush-una-vida-de-aventuras/
  • Meyers, A. D., & Carlson, D. L. (2002). Peonage, power relations, and the built environment at Hacienda Tabi, Yucatan, Mexico. International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 6(4), 225–252.
  • Mbaiwa, J.E. (2005). Enclave tourism and its socio-economic impacts in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. Tourism Management, 26(2), 157–172.
  • Minca, C. (2009). The island: Work, tourism and the biopolitical. Tourist Studies, 9(2), 88–108.
  • Molina Solís, J.F. (1896). Historia del descubrimiento y conquista de Yucatán. Merida of Yucatán: Imprenta y Litografía R. Caballero.
  • Monkkonen, P. (2011). The housing transition in Mexico: Expanding access to housing finance. Urban Affairs Review, 47, 672–695.
  • Mordue, T. (2007). Tourism, urban governance and public space. Leisure Studies, 26(4), 447–462.
  • Mowforth, M., & Munt, I. (1998). Tourism and sustainability: New tourism in the Third World. London: Routledge.
  • Murphy, L., Moscardo, G., McGehee, N., & Konovalov, E. (2012) Blurred boundaries: The implications of new tourism mobilities for destination community well-being. In: Proceedings of BEST Education Network Think Tank XII: mobilities and sustainable tourism (pp. 230–243). Gréoux-les-Bain, France.
  • Oppermann, M. (1993). Tourism space in developing countries. Annals of Tourism Research, 20, 535–556.
  • Pattullo, P. (1996). Last resorts: The cost of tourism in the Caribbean. London: Cassell.
  • Pi-Sunyer, O., & Brooke, T., (2005). Tourism, environmentalism and cultural survival in Quintana Roo. In: L. King, & D. Mccarthy (Eds.) Environmental sociology: From analysis to action (pp. 43–72). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Quezada, S. (1985). Encomienda, cabildo y gubernatura indígena en Yucatán, 1541-1583. [Indigenous estate, town council, and local government in Yucatan 1541-1583]. Historia Mexicana, 34, 662–684.
  • Reed, N. (2001). The caste war of Yucatan: Revised edition. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Riemann, G. (2006). An introduction to “doing biographical research”. Historical Social Research, 31(3), 6–28.
  • Rugeley, T. (1996). Yucatan's Maya peasantry and the origins of the caste war. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
  • Sheller, M. (2003). Consuming the Caribbean: From Arawaks to zombies. London: Routledge.
  • Sheller, M., & Urry, J. (2004). Tourism mobilities: Places to play, places in play. London: Routledge.
  • Sheller, M., & Urry, J. (2006). The new mobilities paradigm. Environment & Planning A, 38, 207–226.
  • Sklair, L. (2009). Commentary: From the consumerist/oppressive city to the functional/emancipatory city. Urban studies, 46(12), 2703–2711.
  • Sparke, M., Sidaway, J.D., Bunnell, T., & Grundy-Warr, C. (2004). Triangulating the borderless world : Geographies of power in the Indonesia – Malaysia – Singapore growth triangle. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 29, 485–498.
  • Strickon, A. (1965). Hacienda and plantation in Yucatan: An historical-ecological consideration of the folk-urban continuum in Yucatan. América Indígena, 25, 35–63.
  • Timothy, D.J. (2002). Tourism and political boundaries. New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Torres, R.M., & Momsen, J.D. (2005a). Gringolandia: The construction of a new tourist space in Mexico. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 95, 314–335.
  • Torres, R., & Momsen, J. (2005b). Planned tourism development in Quintana Roo, Mexico: Engine for regional development or prescription for inequitable growth? Current Issues in Tourism, 8(4), 259–285.
  • Tremblay, M.-A. (1989). The key informant technique: A non-ethnographic application. In R. Burgess (Ed.), Field research: A sourcebook and field manual (pp. 151–163). London: Routledge.
  • Van Kerkhoff, L. & Lebel, L., (2006). Linking knowledge and action for sustainable development. Annual Review of Environment and Resources, 31(1), 445–477.
  • Wilson, T.D. (2008). Economic and social impacts of tourism in Mexico. Latin American Perspectives, 35(3), 37–52.
  • Wimmer, A. (2008). The making and unmaking of ethnic boundaries: A multilevel process theory. American Journal of Sociology, 113, 970–1022.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.