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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The conflicting relationship between tourism and environmental sustainability is one that has existed since man came to realize the degradation he has inflicted upon the land. When considering whether the behavior of tourists is respectful to the principles of sustainable tourism, one cannot ignore the blatant disregard people have when it comes to creating a symbiotic association between the environment upon which they travel and the extent to which this presence has caused near irreparable harm in the process. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTourism.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
whether the behavior of tourists is respectful to the principles of sustainable tourism, one cannot ignore the blatant disregard people have when it comes to creating a symbiotic association between
the environment upon which they travel and the extent to which this presence has caused near irreparable harm in the process. It has been a problem environmentalists have grappled
with for decades: the continuing degradation of public lands by tourists. For example, national and state parks are showing signs of intense wear as people traipse along off-the-beaten-track and
do not follow the unspoken law of the land: tread lightly and leave no trace. Also significant to the drastic devastation tourists continue to wreak upon national and state
parks is the increased use of motorized recreational vehicles that do nothing more than rip up the land. Not only is the sound of these all-terrain vehicles, snowmobiles and
personal watercraft imposing upon those who seek the peace and quiet inherently associated with the outdoors, but they also create "lots of environmental problems" (Lloyd, 1998, p. 3), such as
tremendous traffic problems, air & water pollution, as well as a considerable cost to society. There is no question that increased tourism has created a synergistic consequence with regard
to the amount of land destroyed each and every year in the countrys parks. "There is a close relationship between interpretation and tourism. Interpretation is concerned with providing
information to visitors about the places they are in and encouraging them to appreciate and care for these places" (Moscardo, 2003, p. 112).
As more and more people continue to trample Yosemite, Yellowstone and Utahs Canyonlands National Park, there will soon be nothing left to enjoy. The "heavy toll" (Lloyd, 1998, p.
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