Pamela Nowicka, The No-Nonsense Guide to Tourism.
Tufts, Steven
Pamela Nowicka, The No-Nonsense Guide to Tourism (Toronto: Between
the Lines/New Internationalist Publications 2007)
WRITING CRITICAL material which is accessible to the public is no
easy task. Readable prose, brevity, and a willingness to abandon
stifling scholarly conventions (e.g., endless, not always relevant
citations) escape many academic writers. There is also the challenge of
dissemination, making the material readily available to a broad
readership whose critical thinking is largely shaped by the whims of an
uncritical mainstream media. The No-Nonsense Guides published by the New
Internationalist continue the long-established practice of producing
radical educational
material. These alternative texts provide much greater depth than a *
pamphlet but do not require the reader to commit to a 600-page treatise
on a contemporary political-economic issue.
A recent addition to the series is Pamela Nowicka's The
No-Nonsense Guide to Tourism. Nowicka, an activist and journalist, has
written a concise, readable overview of contemporary tourism from a
critical perspective. Despite the book's brevity, the author
manages to cover significant aspects of one of the fastest growing
global industries. The work is largely focussed on the post-war
development of global tourism, but the introductory chapter does provide
a historical background linking travel and tourism to European
colonization and the growth of holidays in the West (acquired through
the struggle of industrial workers). Nowicka discusses the major themes
in the historical evolution of tourism such as the Grand Tour, and
Cook's mass packaged holidays. The only omission is the role
religious pilgrimages played in historical tourism.
It is in the substantive chapters of the book where Nowicka's
primary theme of "tourism as exploitation" is detailed.
Tourism has been an important economic development strategy foisted on
poor countries by a range of institutional actors including the
International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and the United Nation's
World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), boosted by the World Travel and
Tourism Council (WTTC), an increasingly powerful global industry
association. In chapter two Nowicka begins to take a sledgehammer to the
powerful discourse of tourism as a warm and fuzzy, eco-friendly form of
"bottom-up" economic development. Of particular emphasis is
the problem of "leakage." In many countries in the Global
South, over half of the tourist dollar leaves the region as airline
companies and global hotel chains based in the North retain significant
revenues. The author puts a human face on the problem with a number of
inserts giving voice to workers in the margins of the tourism economy
who explain the struggle they have to make a living in the industry.
Chapters three and four honestly confront perhaps the primary
contradiction complicating a radical perspective. Specifically, there is
no escaping the fact that global tourism is driven by large numbers of
workers in advanced capitalist countries "consuming" places,
experiences, and bodies in the Global South through a number of unequal
and precarious exchange relationships. As Nowicka notes, "to have
traveled confers cachet." (53) The cultural capital accumulated
through travel experiences does differentiate classes, but also
positions all tourists above the 'Other' who is dependent on
the visitor for his/her material well-being. This dependency is
translated into exploitation as tourism workers surrender physical,
emotional and, in growing numbers, sexual labour to tourists for less
money as they compete in a global tourism market. The exploitation is
further described in Chapter five as a form of "new
colonialism," which is reproducing the periphery while doing
significant damage to the environment each time a full passenger jet
leaves the runway.
Chapter six explores how global tourism and its oppressive power
relations remain a preferred and much touted form of economic
development. The myths of environmental friendly development, local
control, and "peace through tourism" are debunked. Despite the
political efforts of NGOS fighting against mega-resort tourism lead by
transnational corporations, such forms of (re)development are dominating
recently traumatized areas from New Orleans to Sri Lanka.
In the final chapter, Nowicka outlines an agenda for a "new
tourism" which reaches beyond voluntary codes of conduct and
"ecotourism" rhetoric. Some of the suggestions such as a
fair-trade regime which removes tourism from trade agreements and
campaigns to educate tourists on why it is necessary to perhaps
"pay more" for informal activities in the destinations are
warranted. Instead of dismissing every souvenir seller as a charlatan or
guide as a hustler, tourists should pay a fair wage. Actions such as an
anti-sweatshop campaign for tourists are commendable. Nowicka fails,
however, to address seriously the most difficult question concerning her
subject: should we continue tourism as a mass consumer activity at all?
As an academic who has travelled from Toronto to Boston, Oslo, Quebec
City, and Vancouver over a seven-week period, I must come clean with my
own hypocrisy in this regard. To quote Augustine, "the world is a
book and those who do not travel read only a page." But as Nowicka
has succinctly argued throughout the text, "reading" the world
in this manner comes with a very high price. A truly radical text must
consider the possibility of a world with limited or no tourism as we
presently know it.
Nowicka's No-Nonsense Guide is a useful work with a few
conceptual limitations, some of which have already been noted. The most
significant failing is the treatment of the "tourist" as a
generic, undifferentiated category. There are varieties of tourists with
significantly different travel motivations and resources. Business
travellers (who often combine pleasure travel with their trips) behave
differently than people visiting friends and relatives (VFRs, a fast
growing segment of the tourist market given global migration).
Similarly, mass resort tourism is different from the "working
holiday" taken by many student travellers. In part, this generic
treatment stems from the book's conflation of global tourism with
North-South leisure travel. In fact, global tourism remains a highly
regionalized phenomenon. For example, France is consistently one of the
world's most visited countries, with most tourists coming from
Europe and North America. The author does not address tourism relations
among rich countries, but I would suggest that similar exploitation
exists, and this is especially evident in the number of immigrant
workers toiling in the hotels of New York and London.
Another weakness of the text stems from its greatest strength. The
author integrates few academic sources into the book, referring a great
deal to a single edited collection. Instead, resources are drawn from
respected international agencies and a number of NGOS working to
alleviate poor working conditions in tourist destinations in the South.
The author presents a wealth of statistical material clearly. Facts and
figures are supplemented with a number of anecdotes, cases, and
vignettes offset from the main text in boxes. The original voices of
Raj, Shankar, and others highlighted in such boxes illuminate the real
inequality experienced by tourism workers.
Overall, Nowicka has produced a powerful little book which meets
the aspirations of the No-Nonsense Guide series. It is written for a
popular audience, but as someone who has taught tourism development at
the post-secondary level, I feel the work will serve as an excellent
complementary text for any course which examines tourism critically. I
fear, however, that it will be largely overlooked by many instructors
who uncritically view tourism development as the best alternative for
poor people in the South.
STEVEN TUFTS
York University