The IGU Tourism Commission is delighted to be collaborating on the International Symposium:
The future of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region
International symposium in memory of Zlatko Pepeonik, 1934-2004
Hermagor, Carinthia [Kärnten], Austria
22nd-24th October 2024
Click here for the Symposium website and final programme (English version)
Zlatko Pepeonik, born 1934 in Varaždin, professor at the Department of Geography, Faculty of Science of the University of Zagreb, was an eminent Croatian geographer and tourism researcher. He taught also at the Portland State University, Oregon, and the University of Texas, Austin, as well as at the University of Mostar, Bosnia and Hercegovina. He was an associate member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences, and a member of the Commission for Tourism and Recreation of the International Geographical Union (IGU). He was the editor-in-chief of the scientific journals Priroda (1984–85) and Geografski horizont (1990–94). He wrote textbooks on tourism geography. He dealt with tourism and regional geography of Croatia, Northern Europe and North America, as well as demography and spatial planning. His close relations to Austrian geography are documented by his co-authorship of the issue “International Tourism Attractions in Central and Southeastern Europe” of the Atlas of Eastern and Southeastern Europe, edited by Peter Jordan. He died twenty years ago in Zagreb, and the symposium is organized in commemoration of this fact.
Organizers:
Southeast Europe Society and its Klagenfurt branch
Austrian Geographical Society and its Klagenfurt branch
University of Klagenfurt, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Geography and Regional Research
University of Zagreb Faculty of Science, Department of Geography
Croatian Geographical Society
Co-organizers:
IGU Commission on Tourism, Leisure and Global Change
IGU Commission on Marginalization, Globalization and Regional and Local Response
Association of Slovenian Geographers
Italian Geographical Society
University of Primorska, Koper/Capodistria
Municipality Hermagor-Pressegger See
NLW Tourismus Marketing GmbH, Hermagor
Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, III. Department of Natural Sciences
Scientific committee:
Peter JORDAN (chair), Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Urban and Regional Research; University of the Free State (South Africa), Faculty of Humanities
Cristina BERETTA, University of Klagenfurt, Institute of Slavistics
Hansjörg BREY, Southeast Europe Society
Ivan ČANJEVAC, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Anita FILIPČIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Borna FUERST-BJELIŠ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography; IGU Commission on Marginalization, Globalization, and Regional and Local Response
Slaven GAŠPAROVIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Igor JELEN, University of Trieste, Department of Political and Social Sciences
Mladen JURAČIĆ, Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Miha KODERMAN, University of Primorska Koper/Capodistria, Department of Geography
Jelena LONČAR, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Mladen MARADIN, Croatian Geographical Society
Max-Peter MENZEL, University of Klagenfurt, Department of Geography and Regional Research
Vuk Tvrtko OPAČIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Eckehard PISTRICK, Gustav Mahler Private University of Music, Klagenfurt
Klaus SCHÖNEBERGER, University of Klagenfurt, Department of Cultural Analysis
Ivan ŠULC, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Julie WILSON, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Faculty of Economics and Business; IGU Commission on Geography of Tourism, Leisure, and Global Change
Symposium theme:
The future of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region in the sense of the coastal areas of the northern Adriatic and their partly mountainous hinterlands faces serious challenges, first and foremost by climate change and global warming. Will in the mountains skiing and other winter sports be sustainable under the conditions of a lack of natural snow and ice? Will in the coastlands seaside tourism remain attractive in growingly hot summers, when further to the North summer temperatures are much milder and better endurable? A second challenge will be climate protection and restrictions in energy consumption. Will tourism in these areas, so far in its vast majority based on private car traffic and dependent on it, be able to survive, when the price of fuels continues to grow, and restrictions make approaching them by car less and less attractive? During the pandemic and post-pandemic period, there were many changes in tourism flows and trajectories that affected the formerly main (and often overcrowded) and marginalized tourist areas in different ways. Often marginalized places became even more marginalized, but in cases of more resilient communities, the pandemic opened up a new niche for their development. These developments also raise the broader question of the role of tourism in marginalized areas. Problems may also arise from demographic change and the desire for a more comfortable work-life balance resulting in growing difficulties to recruit labor, especially seasonal labor so important in tourism. A next set of problems may be due to continued migration from rural to urban areas with the consequence that tourism remains just a “business between foreigners”, where external customers face external waiters and owners with no more local and local-cultural input except a nice scenery. Not a few parts of the Alpine-Adriatic region show already significant characteristics of this kind and convey an imagination of what that means.
This may be an incomplete listing of current and future problems, but they all ask for investigations not only in these very topics, how problems can be met and overcome, but also in the current structures of tourism, the contribution of tourism to the economy at large, its multiplier effect, its impact on regional development, especially of rural regions, its competitiveness on the larger European and global markets as well as in the question who profits or who profits most from tourism in a certain destination. The demand for research includes also studies in the historical development of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region, which may provide some lessons for the future, its interaction with elements of local culture, as well as comparisons with and experiences from other European regions and beyond.
All this is said on the background that tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region is all but homogenous but composed of divergent tourism segments ranging from seaside bathing tourism to Alpine skiing, from health to urban and cultural tourism, from recreational to conference tourism and boasts a huge variety of regional and local specifics. Thus, not only studies on tourism in general and the Alpine-Adriatic region in total would be welcome, but also in-depth investigations into individual market segments and studies with a very local focus.
Suggested subtopics:
Thus, papers on the following topics (without claiming that this list was exhaustive) are invited, whether related to the Alpine-Adriatic region in total, larger parts of it or with a local focus, also comparisons with other European and global regions are welcome:
The future of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region
International symposium in memory of Zlatko Pepeonik, 1934-2004
Hermagor, Carinthia [Kärnten], Austria
22nd-24th October 2024
Click here for the Symposium website and final programme (English version)
Zlatko Pepeonik, born 1934 in Varaždin, professor at the Department of Geography, Faculty of Science of the University of Zagreb, was an eminent Croatian geographer and tourism researcher. He taught also at the Portland State University, Oregon, and the University of Texas, Austin, as well as at the University of Mostar, Bosnia and Hercegovina. He was an associate member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences, and a member of the Commission for Tourism and Recreation of the International Geographical Union (IGU). He was the editor-in-chief of the scientific journals Priroda (1984–85) and Geografski horizont (1990–94). He wrote textbooks on tourism geography. He dealt with tourism and regional geography of Croatia, Northern Europe and North America, as well as demography and spatial planning. His close relations to Austrian geography are documented by his co-authorship of the issue “International Tourism Attractions in Central and Southeastern Europe” of the Atlas of Eastern and Southeastern Europe, edited by Peter Jordan. He died twenty years ago in Zagreb, and the symposium is organized in commemoration of this fact.
Organizers:
Southeast Europe Society and its Klagenfurt branch
Austrian Geographical Society and its Klagenfurt branch
University of Klagenfurt, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Geography and Regional Research
University of Zagreb Faculty of Science, Department of Geography
Croatian Geographical Society
Co-organizers:
IGU Commission on Tourism, Leisure and Global Change
IGU Commission on Marginalization, Globalization and Regional and Local Response
Association of Slovenian Geographers
Italian Geographical Society
University of Primorska, Koper/Capodistria
Municipality Hermagor-Pressegger See
NLW Tourismus Marketing GmbH, Hermagor
Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, III. Department of Natural Sciences
Scientific committee:
Peter JORDAN (chair), Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Urban and Regional Research; University of the Free State (South Africa), Faculty of Humanities
Cristina BERETTA, University of Klagenfurt, Institute of Slavistics
Hansjörg BREY, Southeast Europe Society
Ivan ČANJEVAC, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Anita FILIPČIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Borna FUERST-BJELIŠ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography; IGU Commission on Marginalization, Globalization, and Regional and Local Response
Slaven GAŠPAROVIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Igor JELEN, University of Trieste, Department of Political and Social Sciences
Mladen JURAČIĆ, Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Miha KODERMAN, University of Primorska Koper/Capodistria, Department of Geography
Jelena LONČAR, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Mladen MARADIN, Croatian Geographical Society
Max-Peter MENZEL, University of Klagenfurt, Department of Geography and Regional Research
Vuk Tvrtko OPAČIĆ, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Eckehard PISTRICK, Gustav Mahler Private University of Music, Klagenfurt
Klaus SCHÖNEBERGER, University of Klagenfurt, Department of Cultural Analysis
Ivan ŠULC, University of Zagreb, Department of Geography
Julie WILSON, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Faculty of Economics and Business; IGU Commission on Geography of Tourism, Leisure, and Global Change
Symposium theme:
The future of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region in the sense of the coastal areas of the northern Adriatic and their partly mountainous hinterlands faces serious challenges, first and foremost by climate change and global warming. Will in the mountains skiing and other winter sports be sustainable under the conditions of a lack of natural snow and ice? Will in the coastlands seaside tourism remain attractive in growingly hot summers, when further to the North summer temperatures are much milder and better endurable? A second challenge will be climate protection and restrictions in energy consumption. Will tourism in these areas, so far in its vast majority based on private car traffic and dependent on it, be able to survive, when the price of fuels continues to grow, and restrictions make approaching them by car less and less attractive? During the pandemic and post-pandemic period, there were many changes in tourism flows and trajectories that affected the formerly main (and often overcrowded) and marginalized tourist areas in different ways. Often marginalized places became even more marginalized, but in cases of more resilient communities, the pandemic opened up a new niche for their development. These developments also raise the broader question of the role of tourism in marginalized areas. Problems may also arise from demographic change and the desire for a more comfortable work-life balance resulting in growing difficulties to recruit labor, especially seasonal labor so important in tourism. A next set of problems may be due to continued migration from rural to urban areas with the consequence that tourism remains just a “business between foreigners”, where external customers face external waiters and owners with no more local and local-cultural input except a nice scenery. Not a few parts of the Alpine-Adriatic region show already significant characteristics of this kind and convey an imagination of what that means.
This may be an incomplete listing of current and future problems, but they all ask for investigations not only in these very topics, how problems can be met and overcome, but also in the current structures of tourism, the contribution of tourism to the economy at large, its multiplier effect, its impact on regional development, especially of rural regions, its competitiveness on the larger European and global markets as well as in the question who profits or who profits most from tourism in a certain destination. The demand for research includes also studies in the historical development of tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region, which may provide some lessons for the future, its interaction with elements of local culture, as well as comparisons with and experiences from other European regions and beyond.
All this is said on the background that tourism in the Alpine-Adriatic region is all but homogenous but composed of divergent tourism segments ranging from seaside bathing tourism to Alpine skiing, from health to urban and cultural tourism, from recreational to conference tourism and boasts a huge variety of regional and local specifics. Thus, not only studies on tourism in general and the Alpine-Adriatic region in total would be welcome, but also in-depth investigations into individual market segments and studies with a very local focus.
Suggested subtopics:
Thus, papers on the following topics (without claiming that this list was exhaustive) are invited, whether related to the Alpine-Adriatic region in total, larger parts of it or with a local focus, also comparisons with other European and global regions are welcome:
- Impact of climate change on winter tourism in mountainous regions
- Impact of climate change on summer seaside tourism
- Tourism and nature protection/biodiversity
- Concepts for tourism sustainability/eco-tourism
- Pandemic and post-pandemic impact on changes in tourism trajectories
- Modal split in tourism – present and future
- Labor supply in tourism – present and future
- Regional development effects of tourism
- The role of tourism in marginal areas
- Tourism and local demographic development
- Overtourism
- Trends in European tourism
- Driving forces in tourism
- Who profits from tourism?
- Tourism and spatial planning
- Ecological aspects of tourism
- Local cultural heritage as a tourist attraction
- Ethnic/linguistic minorities as attractions in cultural tourism
- The role of language and language competences in the tourist industry
- How can local culture/heritage be made sustainable in situ, and be taken serious as a resource and locational factor to be integrated into tourist agendas which combine local development and the protection of natural and cultural heritage?
- Historical development of tourism
- Experiences from other tourist regions
- Touristic branding and naming
Photo credits: Opatija (header image, by Peter Jordan) and Mount Gartnerkofel at Nassfeld (above image, by Markus Steiner)