“…It could have been expected that the COVID-19 pandemic might have constituted a decisive tipping point for a deprioritising of the economy, considering the tourism system as a means to serve society and the sustainable development goals (SDGs) that foresee the viability of our common future (G€ ossling et al, 2021;Higgins-Desbiolles, 2018). However, instead of considering the current crisis of the pandemic, together with the climate crisis, as imperative reasons for urgent structural changes in global mass tourism (Jamal and Budke, 2020), it is quite likelyamong other possible scenarios of "survival of the fittest" (collapse), "business as unusual" (transition) and "responsible tourism" (transformation) (Postma et al, 2020;Yeoman et al, 2022) that there will be a return to "business as usual" (growth) and the old normality of unsustainable tourism as soon as the health crisis is overcome (Hall et al, 2020;Ioannides and Gyim othy, 2020;V arzaru et al, 2021). In fact, the dominant concern has been the profound negative economic impact of COVID-19, especially in regard to tourism (Sharma and Nicolau, 2020;U gur and Akbıyık, 2020;United Nations, 2020;Yeh, 2021), with a constant reiteration of the urgency of resuming stimulating activity, based on a "boosterist", expansionary and pro-growth motivation (Higgins-Desbiolles, 2021).…”