A Sustainable Tourism Workforce
Current issues
Herausgeber: Solnet, David J.; Baum, Tom; Mooney, Shelagh; Robinson, Richard N. S.
A Sustainable Tourism Workforce
Current issues
Herausgeber: Solnet, David J.; Baum, Tom; Mooney, Shelagh; Robinson, Richard N. S.
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This book brings together issues of social justice and the neglect of a sustainable orientation to the tourism workforce. This has resulted in an impoverished, unsustainable, and transient workforce that does not meet the aims of UN sustainable goals within the sector or indeed the UNTWO Code of ethics towards its employees.
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This book brings together issues of social justice and the neglect of a sustainable orientation to the tourism workforce. This has resulted in an impoverished, unsustainable, and transient workforce that does not meet the aims of UN sustainable goals within the sector or indeed the UNTWO Code of ethics towards its employees.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm
- Gewicht: 740g
- ISBN-13: 9781032564166
- ISBN-10: 1032564164
- Artikelnr.: 69484878
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm
- Gewicht: 740g
- ISBN-13: 9781032564166
- ISBN-10: 1032564164
- Artikelnr.: 69484878
Shelagh Mooney is Associate Professor at the School of Hospitality and Tourism, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. Shelagh's research is focused on diversity and sustainable workforce issues. Shelagh is interested in how gender intersects with other aspects of individual identity and the interactions between individual, organisational and societal levels. Richard N.S. Robinson is Associate Professor at The University of Queensland Business School, Australia. Richard's research explores tourism and hospitality workforce issues including sustaining employment for disadvantaged groups and culinary workers. David J. Solnet is Professor at The University of Queensland Business School, Australia. David's research focuses on hospitality and service employees, work and employment, focusing on human resource management, service climate and culture and generation Y and Z. Tom Baum is Professor at the Department of Work Employment and Organization, University of Strathclyde, Scotland, and Distinguished Visiting Professor in the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He is interested in the relationship between work and its wider social, cultural and economic context in frontline services.
Introduction: A critical review of sustainable work and employment in
tourism 1. Sustaining Tourism Employment 2. Sustaining precarity:
critically examining tourism and employment 3. Rethinking decent work: the
value of dignity in tourism employment 4. Employment of the workforce with
disabilities in the hospitality industry 5. Seeking justice beyond the
platform economy: migrant workers navigating precarious lives 6.
Situational analysis as a critical methodology: mapping the tourism system
in post-Katrina New Orleans 7. Labour, necessity-induced (im)mobilities,
and the hotel industry: a developing country perspective 8. 'Is he going to
be sleazy?' Women's experiences of emotional labour connected to sexual
harassment in the spa tourism industry 9. The socio-economic impact of
regional tourism: an occupation-based modelling perspective from Sweden 10.
Identifying a community capital investment portfolio to sustain a tourism
workforce 11. The historical structuring of the U.S. tourism workforce: a
critical review 12. Gender, work, and tourism in the Guatemalan Highlands
13. Decent work and tourism workers in the age of intelligent automation
and digital surveillance 14. From corporatist consensus to neo-liberal
revolution: a gendered analysis of the hotel workers union and its impact
on (un)sustainable employment practices in the New Zealand hotel sector,
1955-2000 15. The sustainable development goals: the contribution of
tourism volunteering
tourism 1. Sustaining Tourism Employment 2. Sustaining precarity:
critically examining tourism and employment 3. Rethinking decent work: the
value of dignity in tourism employment 4. Employment of the workforce with
disabilities in the hospitality industry 5. Seeking justice beyond the
platform economy: migrant workers navigating precarious lives 6.
Situational analysis as a critical methodology: mapping the tourism system
in post-Katrina New Orleans 7. Labour, necessity-induced (im)mobilities,
and the hotel industry: a developing country perspective 8. 'Is he going to
be sleazy?' Women's experiences of emotional labour connected to sexual
harassment in the spa tourism industry 9. The socio-economic impact of
regional tourism: an occupation-based modelling perspective from Sweden 10.
Identifying a community capital investment portfolio to sustain a tourism
workforce 11. The historical structuring of the U.S. tourism workforce: a
critical review 12. Gender, work, and tourism in the Guatemalan Highlands
13. Decent work and tourism workers in the age of intelligent automation
and digital surveillance 14. From corporatist consensus to neo-liberal
revolution: a gendered analysis of the hotel workers union and its impact
on (un)sustainable employment practices in the New Zealand hotel sector,
1955-2000 15. The sustainable development goals: the contribution of
tourism volunteering
Introduction: A critical review of sustainable work and employment in
tourism 1. Sustaining Tourism Employment 2. Sustaining precarity:
critically examining tourism and employment 3. Rethinking decent work: the
value of dignity in tourism employment 4. Employment of the workforce with
disabilities in the hospitality industry 5. Seeking justice beyond the
platform economy: migrant workers navigating precarious lives 6.
Situational analysis as a critical methodology: mapping the tourism system
in post-Katrina New Orleans 7. Labour, necessity-induced (im)mobilities,
and the hotel industry: a developing country perspective 8. 'Is he going to
be sleazy?' Women's experiences of emotional labour connected to sexual
harassment in the spa tourism industry 9. The socio-economic impact of
regional tourism: an occupation-based modelling perspective from Sweden 10.
Identifying a community capital investment portfolio to sustain a tourism
workforce 11. The historical structuring of the U.S. tourism workforce: a
critical review 12. Gender, work, and tourism in the Guatemalan Highlands
13. Decent work and tourism workers in the age of intelligent automation
and digital surveillance 14. From corporatist consensus to neo-liberal
revolution: a gendered analysis of the hotel workers union and its impact
on (un)sustainable employment practices in the New Zealand hotel sector,
1955-2000 15. The sustainable development goals: the contribution of
tourism volunteering
tourism 1. Sustaining Tourism Employment 2. Sustaining precarity:
critically examining tourism and employment 3. Rethinking decent work: the
value of dignity in tourism employment 4. Employment of the workforce with
disabilities in the hospitality industry 5. Seeking justice beyond the
platform economy: migrant workers navigating precarious lives 6.
Situational analysis as a critical methodology: mapping the tourism system
in post-Katrina New Orleans 7. Labour, necessity-induced (im)mobilities,
and the hotel industry: a developing country perspective 8. 'Is he going to
be sleazy?' Women's experiences of emotional labour connected to sexual
harassment in the spa tourism industry 9. The socio-economic impact of
regional tourism: an occupation-based modelling perspective from Sweden 10.
Identifying a community capital investment portfolio to sustain a tourism
workforce 11. The historical structuring of the U.S. tourism workforce: a
critical review 12. Gender, work, and tourism in the Guatemalan Highlands
13. Decent work and tourism workers in the age of intelligent automation
and digital surveillance 14. From corporatist consensus to neo-liberal
revolution: a gendered analysis of the hotel workers union and its impact
on (un)sustainable employment practices in the New Zealand hotel sector,
1955-2000 15. The sustainable development goals: the contribution of
tourism volunteering