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dc.contributor.authorHaigh, Matthew
dc.date.accessioned2024-11-25T06:38:43Z
dc.date.available2024-11-25T06:38:43Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifier.urihttps://thuvienso.hoasen.edu.vn/handle/123456789/15937
dc.descriptionTourism Management 81 (2020) 104166vi
dc.description.abstractThere is a need for empirical data that can be used to confirm or disconfirm literature that makes a case for functional linkages between cultural activity, inbound tourism and wider economic activity. This motivates a case-based investigation using Sarawak, a culturally rich state of Malaysia and which is currently trying to diversify and uplift its economy. Using interviews of tourism operators, artists and cultural brokers, visits to art venues and examination of documentary material, the paper identifies Sarawak’s cultural and tourism policies, the ways they have been operationalized, and some of the concrete outcomes. The findings are interpreted by parsing Adorno’s concepts of significance and function into their normative, representational and material di­ mensions. Tourism planners, it is found, have exoticized and marginalized local communities at the cost of developing a diversified economy. The policy dilemma extends to policy objects. How can artists relocated to urban areas be enabled to be productive on their own terms, and how can faraway communities lend support to their artists? Solutions might be sought, it is argued, using a participatory approach to cultural tourism planning.vi
dc.language.isoenvi
dc.publisherElserviervi
dc.subjectCultural tourism; Policy; Performing arts; Heritage; Malaysia; Sarawakvi
dc.titleCultural tourism policy in developing regions: The case of Sarawak, Malaysiavi
dc.typeArticlevi


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