“…Bringing the discussion back to the tourism realm, we must acknowledge that these imaginaries and dynamics of dispossession have also been reinforced by the tourism industry in various post-conflict spaces. Evidence from Sri Lanka (Buultjens et al, 2016), Cambodia (Winter, 2008) Bosnia and Herzegovina (Volcic et al, 2014), Cyprus (Scott, 2012), and Colombia (Ojeda, 2012), demonstrated that tourism can be a source of structural violence, particularly when large operators advanced their interests to the detriment of several local communities. In these contexts, tourism is used as a gateway for the privatisation of common goods, deregulation, displacement, and the commodification of people, places, cultures, and pasts (B€ uscher & Fletcher, 2017;Devine & Ojeda, 2017).…”