Results 71 to 80 of about 1,348 (199)

Introversion to Digital Ghettos: Wilful Self‐Exclusion of Syrian Refugees in Türkiye

open access: yesInternational Migration, Volume 64, Issue 3, May 2026.
ABSTRACT This study foregrounds digital exclusion as a driver of wilful self‐exclusion among Syrian refugees in Türkiye, challenging the premise that online communication inherently facilitates integration. Guided by a theoretical framework that bridges the contact hypothesis, social capital theory and concepts of digital othering, it analyses how ...
Haldun Narmanlıoğlu, Serkan Bayrakcı
wiley   +1 more source

Standing on the Family Farm in Tysvær: How Did “Kallekodt” become “Thompson”?—How Is Tysvær Pronounced?

open access: yes, 2012
This article explores the role that language plays in the legacy tourism business, an increasingly important sub-segment of the tourism industry. While seemingly obvious that those traveling to the land of their ancestors may request language help from ...
Ray, Nina M.
core  

Going Back Home: Diaspora Tourism in Homeland Development

open access: yes, 2016
Full text is available to authenticated members of The University of Auckland only.Increased migration of Fijians to developed countries, such as New Zealand, can cause a brain drain and loss of skilled workers which can results in economic downturn ...
Temo, Barbara
core  

How does the Russia-Ukraine war pave the way to diaspora tourism in Ukraine?

open access: yes
Diaspora tourism primarily refers to various population groups, including migrants, foreign workers, political refugees, ethnic and religious minorities and overseas communities living away from their ancestral homeland for various reasons.
Çetinkaya, M.Y.   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Exploring the conceptual boundaries of diaspora and battlefield tourism: Australians' travel to the Gallipoli battlefield, Turkey, as a case study [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
Historical tourism resources associated with diasporic communities and battlefields would at face value appear to have little in common. On closer inspection, however, diaspora and battlefield tourism share several elements in common. These commonalities
Atay, Lutfi   +4 more
core   +1 more source

PENGEMBANGAN POTENSI PARIWISATA, EKONOMI LOKAL BERBASIS E-COMMERCE KAWASAN WISATA GUNUNG IJEN KAB. BANYUWANGI

open access: yesJurnal Riset Akuntansi dan Bisnis Airlangga, 2016
The era of globalization make the move into tourism industry's largest and strongest in the financing of the global economy. The development of tourism has three functions Promote the economy; Maintaining the national identity and preservation of ...
Riski Isminar Ardianti
doaj  

Home Away from Home: Diaspora Tourism and Transnational Attachment of Second-Generation Chinese-Americans

open access: yes, 2012
previously providedGlobalization has allowed contemporary immigrants to live in two worlds and maintain virtual and physical contact with their homeland through leisure and diaspora tourism.
Huang, Wei-Jue   +2 more
core  

Nature-based tourism on communal land: the Mavhulani experience

open access: yes, 2015
South Africa is experiencing a boom in nature-based tourism in which underdeveloped and previously marginalized homeland areas are not sharing. The aim of this article is to determine some of the crucial constraints which inhibit tourism in these areas,
Viljoen, J.H., Naicker, K.
core   +2 more sources

THE ORIGINAL DESIGN OF THE PROJECT RECREATION AND TOURISM SMALL COMPLEX

open access: yesRUDN Journal of Engineering Research, 2017
The article deals with the architectural design of the recreational and tourist complex “School traveler Fyodor Konyukhov” in the Domodedovo district of Moscow region, near the village Bityagovo.
V M Shuvalo, - Quazi Shibli Suman
doaj   +1 more source

The Impact of External Economic Situation on Labor Market of the Faroe Islands in 2000–2025 [PDF]

open access: yesСовременная Европа
Being essentially an island microstate, the Faroe Islands have a number of features of their economic development: high dependence on two industries (fishing and fish farming), which directly employs about 1/3 of the workforce, as well as a limited labor
Roman Plyusnin
doaj   +1 more source

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