Eps 3: travelling Human Geography
Tourism geography is the study of travel and tourism , as an industry and as a social and cultural activity.
Tourism geography is that branch of human geography that deals with the study of travel and its impact on places.
Physical geography provides the essential background, against which tourism places are created and environmental impacts and concerns are major issues, that must be considered in managing the development of tourism places.
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Willard Wilson
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Human geography, on the other hand, involves analyzing the distribution of people and cultures around the world. Geography is a powerful tool for improving our understanding of the world, and when children and adults study geography, they are much more likely to become citizens of the world.
Those who understand how geography has made the world as it is today are more likely to understand global interdependence. Human geography is an important part of our understanding of the global interconnectedness of people, cultures and ecosystems.
There are many cultural aspects around the world and how they relate to their place of origin and the places they travel, as people constantly move back and forth between different areas. Among the most important cultural phenomena studied in human geography are the use of geography as a means of communication, as well as other cultural aspects that explain why people function as they do in the areas where they live.
Science is integrative in that it covers a wide range of disciplines, such as geology, geophysics, geography and the geography of culture. Tourism geography also has a close relationship with other sciences, including geography as a subject in the fields of tourism and tourism management, tourism economics, travel management and travel planning.
Landscape is used as a determining unit of geographical research, but more recently tourism geography has been able to achieve a broader definition of what is considered landscape, such as a city, country, territory or region, and its inhabitants. The landscape is developed through culture, and culture conversely contributes to the development of landscapes, "he says. Culture develops the landscape and cultures develop the landscapes and vice versa.
s work on cultural geography is, in contrast to the quantitative methods of physical geography, of high quality. Human geography is still practiced, but a more specialized area of human geography has developed, with a focus on the spatially related world as it relates to the world around us.
These fields include geography, urban planning, cultural geography and research into human geography. Geography often involves reading research studies, but it is also an important subject for students of all ages. Studying geography helps them read non-fiction by using reading materials related to geography, such as maps, maps, and maps of the world around them.
It helps them understand why, when and how it happened throughout history, and it helps them to know the history of the world around them and their place in it.
If you want to make a difference in the world around you, studying geography is a good start. It will not only help you plan a better travel experience, but you will also make the most of your time during your stay.
The professional path you choose may depend on whether you study physical or human geography. Geography as a profession offers you the opportunity to better understand some of the most pressing problems of modern society, including climate change, global warming, the environment and human rights issues.
The first is natural science, which focuses on the physical materials and processes of the earth, while the second is social science, which deals with questions of human communities and culture. The link between the two areas is that there are a number of primary factors that attract tourists to certain areas, such as the availability of natural resources, the quality of food and water, and tourism.
Tourism and geography examine the relationship between places, landscapes and people and describe travel and tourism as economic, social and cultural activities. In short, tourists discover and appreciate the benefits of visiting certain places and the local economy that benefits from and exploits their resources.
Within the boundaries of national borders, Melillo investigates the interactions and encounters within and outside these boundaries. In her geographical imagination, she creates a picture of human breeders displacing insects as the primary source of food for the local population and also for the local people. It decentres the Eurocentric narrative and examines interaction and encounter in the context of local cultures, cultures and traditions.
The approach of scale-shift is not only geographical, nor merely epistemological, but also methodological, as Barraclough and Melillo urge us to shift the scale of historical investigation. It is the other knowledge that is gained, because the exploration of place, space and scale, which we have acquired through past, present and historical studies, is always about not only the geographical concepts and processes associated with it, but also about the routes, goods and structures of geographical knowledge that we learn from spatial history. This is the main difference between the historical and theoretical aspects of the geographical approach "scale - shift."