2000
DOI: 10.1080/146166800363420
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Tourism and migration: New relationships between production and consumption

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Cited by 486 publications
(371 citation statements)
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“…However, traditional immigration composed of job-seekers is much more controversial in certain geographical areas, especially when unskilled immigrants are considered. The exception could be senior management and expatriate managers, who migrate often as a consequence of the internationalization of the capital in the tourism industry (Williams & Hall, 2000b), and some skilled workers who perform 'difficult' or exotic tasks in their jobs (e.g., chefs) and young travelers who work as part of a longer travelling experience.…”
Section: Immigration and Destination Competitiveness In Tourismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, traditional immigration composed of job-seekers is much more controversial in certain geographical areas, especially when unskilled immigrants are considered. The exception could be senior management and expatriate managers, who migrate often as a consequence of the internationalization of the capital in the tourism industry (Williams & Hall, 2000b), and some skilled workers who perform 'difficult' or exotic tasks in their jobs (e.g., chefs) and young travelers who work as part of a longer travelling experience.…”
Section: Immigration and Destination Competitiveness In Tourismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to them, these new structures within which Norwegian leisure time is spent are characterised by an extension of the cabins' user base better standards, and new ambitions concerning identity construction via leisure activities. This perspective treats cabin life as just another leisure activity, which is subject to the same overarching trends as any other form of leisure travel, such as increasingly volatile and globalised labour markets, the escalated ageing of developed societies, changing national and regional identities, and new values regarding life and work (Williams & Michael Hall, 2000).…”
Section: Cabins As Embedded In Modern Everyday Lifementioning
confidence: 99%
“…De los temas más estudiados sobre el turismo residencial, se destaca el de la migración internacional (Benson y O'Reilly, 2009;Hall y Müller, 2004;Müller, 2002;Rodríguez, 2004;Williams y Hall, 2000), ya que en un inicio, el turismo residencial comenzó como un fenómeno migratorio que se dio desde el norte al sur de Europa (Alarcón et al, 2010;Casado et al, 2004;Huete y Mantecón, 2010 ;López, 1995;O´Really, y Benson, 2009), se mencionan también los estudios del perfil que tienen los turistas residenciales (Coles et al, 2005;O´Really y Benson, 2009;Sanz, 2008), y los de medición estadística (Varela et al, 2003), así como su análisis teórico (Guilding et al, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified