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Use and Abuse of Tourism - The Goan Experience

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Brammer, Natasha (Coventry University)
  Author Beech, John (Coventry University)
CONFERENCE TITLE:
  2nd International Symposium on Tourism and Sustainability
CONF. LOCATION: None
YEAR: 2003
PUB TYPE: Conference Paper
SUBJECT(S): Sustainable tourism; Goan tourism; role of the state in tourism
DISCIPLINE: Business/Management
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-403-661 (Last edited on 2004/09/19 09:47:55 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
The state of Goa provides an unusual example of tourism development. While responding with a measure of fatalism to the invasion of hippy tourists in the 1960s, some of whom remain in Goa today, Goans are rather more divided in their responses to the influx of mass tourists, which began over a decade ago.
The onset of tourism on a large scale has produced pressures on both society and the environment. Reactions to mass tourism have been varied, but include the more organised forms of stakeholder resistance that are common in India. Major issues that have emerged centre on the community’s reaction to disputes over the use of land and, in particular, the use and abuse of beaches.
This paper first focuses on the history of conflict between two groups of Goan stakeholders - the small-scale entrepreneurs who seek a living from tourism through the running of beach shacks, hawking and rave party organisation, and the large corporate interests who have seen tourism development in terms of beach-front hotels and casinos, who see the market as an unsophisticated extension of sunlust tourism by Europeans. The conflict between these two groups is then studied in the context of the responses of a third significant stakeholder group, the Goan authorities, both in the form of the state government and the Goan police. The role of protest movements is also considered.
The issues of land use, planning and community involvement in tourism development emerge from the analysis as significant in critiquing the way that tourism has evolved in recent years. In a broader view the issue of conflicting views of Goan identity by Goans themselves becomes significant.
The paper concludes that the development of tourism in Goa has started down an inherently unsustainable route for reasons grounded in the broader context of changes in both global and Indian tourism. It is only very recently that planning by the authorities and producers of tourist products has begun to adopt a resource audit approach. The major concern for Goan tourism is whether these more recent responses are well-founded and sufficiently timely.
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