2009
DOI: 10.1080/09654310903141722
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Public Policies and Development of the Tourism Industry in the Aegean Region

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Cited by 24 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…On the one hand, it is linked to fast economic growth and higher value added in the region, particularly in coastal or mountainous regions [10,40,[45][46][47]. On the other hand, more recent studies show lower levels of gross value added in tourism and a lack of connection between tourism, education and productivity, as well as a low contribution of knowledge and research to the economy of regions specialising in tourism [14,37,46].…”
Section: Specialisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…On the one hand, it is linked to fast economic growth and higher value added in the region, particularly in coastal or mountainous regions [10,40,[45][46][47]. On the other hand, more recent studies show lower levels of gross value added in tourism and a lack of connection between tourism, education and productivity, as well as a low contribution of knowledge and research to the economy of regions specialising in tourism [14,37,46].…”
Section: Specialisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The specialization of regional economic activities dates back to Marshall's concept of polarization theory and the new economic geography theory and is based on underlying competitive advantage as a result of inter-firm interactions and institutions and diffusion of technology, transfer of innovation, skills and knowledge (see Gulcan et al, 2009) [40]. It is often associated with several theoretical models, such as the industrial districts model, which refers to the existence of different categories of firms, their proximity and the quality of the social milieu including trust, transferable skills, knowledge, in order to achieve external economies of scale and increase competitiveness and productivity [41].…”
Section: Specialisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Akgüngör applied LQ to locate regions in Turkey where the tourism sector was more specialized (Gülcan et al, 2009). In his previous publications, the author also worked with the locational Gini and with multivariate methods based on I-O data (Akgüngör et al, 2003;Akgüngör, 2006;Falcioglu and Akgüngör, 2008).…”
Section: Frequency Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous literature on related topics has employed location quotients (LQ) in order to identify those regions with an above-average concentration of tourism activity (see e.g. Klein et al, 2005;Thompson, 2007;Gülcan et al, 2009). These can be calculated as a ratio of local and national tourism concentrations, measured as the proportion of tourismrelated jobs to total jobs at each level, for example.…”
Section: (Eq 1) Tur = (Local Tourism Iae Revenues)/(national Tourismmentioning
confidence: 99%