Part I. Introduction.- Chapter 1. Tourism and the Filipino Culture
and Society.- Part II. Tourism in Philippine Communities.- Chapter
2. Performance Assessment of Barangay Nagacadan as a
Community-Based Tourist Destination.- Chapter 3. Stoked in the Sea:
Understanding Stakeholder Perceptions of Surfing.- Chapter 4.
Strolling Between Shanties: The Case of Smokey Tours’ Slum
Tourism.- Chapter 5. Re-Creating Slum Tourism in Tondo, Manila:
Perspectives of the Local Residents.- Chapter 6. Residents’
Perceptions of Tourism in a Pilgrimage Destination in the
Philippines.- Part III. Travellers and Tourists’ Perspectives.-
Chapter 7. The Travelling Filipina in Periodicals (1898-1938).-
Chapter 8. The Solo Filipina Traveller.- Chapter 9. Once Upon a
Time in History: Tourist Perceptions of Dark Tourism in the
Philippines.- Chapter 10. The KULAS Travelogues: A Deconstruction
of Foreign Vloggers Depiction of Mindanao as a Travel Destination.-
Chapter 11. “It’s More than Fun in the Philippines!” A Grounded
Theory Exploration of Tourist Eudaimonic Experience in the
Philippines.- Part IV. Events and Festivals: Centring Filipino
Culture and Spirituality.- Chapter 12. Postcolonial Appeal of
Philippine Festivals.- Chapter 13. Reclaiming Culture: Innovating
Traditional Religious Performance for Tourism in the Philippines.-
Part V. Conclusion.- Chapter 14. Looking Forward: Tourism Growth in
a Filipino Context.
Dr. Richard S. Aquino is a Lecturer of Tourism and Marketing at the
UC Business School, University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New
Zealand. He holds a Doctor of Philosophy from the Auckland
University of Technology in New Zealand, where he also obtained his
master’s degree in international tourism management, and a Bachelor
of Science in Tourism from the University of Santo Tomas in Manila,
Philippines. His doctoral research focused on how the adoption of
social entrepreneurship through tourism changes host communities in
the Philippines. His other research interests include sustainable
tourism planning and development, geotourism, tourist behaviour,
and recently, the decolonization of tourism knowledge production.
Currently, he serves as the research notes editor of Tourism in
Marine Environments and an editor of the Austrian Journal of
South-East Asian Studies. Apart from academic work, he has been
actively involved in tourism planning consultancy projects in the
Philippinesand New Zealand.
Dr. Brooke A. Porter works in knowledge management as an
instructional designer with international aid agencies. Brooke
holds a Doctor of Philosophy from the Auckland University of
Technology in New Zealand, a master’s in education from Chaminade
University in Honolulu, Hawai’i, and a bachelor of science in
marine biology from the Florida Institute of Technology in
Melbourne, Florida. Some of her current work investigates tourism
as a development and conservation strategy as well as the role of
gender. Her doctoral research explored marine tourism as a
supplemental livelihood for fisheries-based communities in the
Philippines. Brooke also serves as an Honorary Research Fellow at
Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand, and as scientific
adviser to The Coral Triangle Conservancy, an NGO in the
Philippines.
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