Tourism, Development and South Africa: Culture, Equity and Climate Change in the Global South
By (Author) Garth Allen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
13th November 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Political economy
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Drawing on his thirty years of consultancy experience with the World Bank, the UN Development Programme, the African Union, and UNICEF, leading tourism and development expert Garth Allen offers a deep dive into the socio-political dynamics that have shaped tourism in South Africa since its first democratic elections in 1994. In so doing, Allen engages a vast range of burgeoning debates on the potential and limits of sustainable socio-economic development in Africa and throughout the Global South. Bringing all this to bear on key tourism phenomena such as cultural tourism, eco-tourism, pro-poor tourism, event tourism, and medical tourism, Allen shows what varies according to local contexts, and at the same time, what remains consistent across Africa and other areas of the Global South, all of which brings into focus those forces within the international political economy that drive both tourism and development.
For its broad theoretical coverage and its rich empirical detail drawing on the authors first-hand experience, this book is an essential resource for upper-level students and researchers interested in international tourism studies, political economics, international development, and the international political economics of Africa and the Global South.
Professor Garth James Allen is Director of Really Useful Knowledge Consultants, Adjunct Professor of Human Sciences at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa, and Vice Chancellors Adjunct Research Professor of Management Sciences at Durban University of Technology, South Africa. He has published ten books, including Tourism in the New South Africa: Social Responsibility and the Tourist Experience (I. B. Tauris, 2004).