Imagining Collaborative Tourism Futures

G. Jennings
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Abstract

Wicked problems of the world—poverty, health and wellbeing, equality, climate change, refugee crises, sustainability, ... ; continue to challenge humankind. Despite decades of collaborations, partnerships, policies and research, these wicked problems remain primarily unresolved and manifold. This is not unexpected as this is inherent in the nature of wicked problems. As Horst Rittel (1967 in Churchman, 1967) and Rittel and Webber (1973) noted, wicked problems are marked by the inability to provide a universal solution and a universal research approach. Instead the problems are context specific and continually transmogrify – there is no end point. In addition, they can overlap, interrelate, interconnect and intersect. In framing the nature of a wicked problem, the knowledge sets and experiences, social situatedness, respective insider- or outsider-ness and worldviews of the various stakeholders involved play critical roles with regard to how the problem is addressed. They inform and shape what is given attention and why; what is included or excluded and why; as well as the methodologies and methods used. Every attempt to address a wicked problem leaves a legacy including repercussions and unintended consequences. There is no undoing of actions. As four of the manifold stakeholders concerned with wicked problems, researchers, planners, designers and practitioners have the task of “improv[ing] some [of the] characteristics of the world where people live ...” (Rittel & Webber, 1973:167). These four stakeholders, like all stakeholders, are responsible for the consequences of their actions and ongoing ramifications associated with the redress of wicked problems. Unlike traditional “scientized” (Xiang, 2013: 2) linear approaches used to address solvable, or ‘tame’, problems; non-linear, social process-based problem-solving approaches are required for wicked problems. Rather than outcomes being supported/not supported or validated/not validated in the case of tame problems, strategies used to address wicked problems are usually evaluated using criteria, such as “better or worse”, and are always influenced by stakeholder viewpoints (Rittel & Webber, 1973:163). As a consequence of the nature of wicked problems, there is no ‘quick fix’ or easy way to address these ‘malignant’, ‘vicious’, ‘tricky’, ‘aggressive’ – wicked problems (Rittel & Webber, 1973:160).
想象合作旅游的未来
世界上的邪恶问题——贫穷、健康和福祉、平等、气候变化、难民危机、可持续性……;继续挑战人类。尽管经过了几十年的合作、伙伴关系、政策和研究,这些棘手的问题基本上仍未得到解决,而且五花八门。这并不意外,因为这是邪恶问题的本质所固有的。正如霍斯特·里特尔(1967)和里特尔和韦伯(1973)所指出的那样,邪恶问题的特点是无法提供通用的解决方案和通用的研究方法。相反,这些问题是特定于环境的,并且在不断变化——没有终点。此外,它们还可以重叠、相互关联、相互连接和相交。在构建一个邪恶问题的本质时,所涉及的各种利益相关者的知识集和经验、社会情境、各自的内部人或外部人以及世界观对如何解决问题起着关键作用。它们告知并塑造了关注的对象和原因;包括什么或不包括什么,为什么;以及使用的方法和方法。每一次解决邪恶问题的尝试都会留下后遗症,包括反响和意想不到的后果。没有撤销的行动。研究人员、规划者、设计师和实践者是与邪恶问题相关的四种利益相关者,他们的任务是“改善人们生活的世界的某些特征……(Rittel & Webber, 1973:167)。与所有利益相关者一样,这四个利益相关者对其行为的后果以及与纠正恶劣问题相关的持续后果负责。与传统的“科学化”(Xiang, 2013: 2)用于解决可解决或“驯服”问题的线性方法不同;非线性的、基于社会过程的解决问题的方法是解决棘手问题所必需的。而不是结果支持/不支持或验证/不验证在温和问题的情况下,用于解决棘手问题的策略通常使用标准进行评估,如“更好或更坏”,并且总是受到利益相关者观点的影响(Rittel & Webber, 1973:163)。由于邪恶问题的本质,没有“快速解决”或简单的方法来解决这些“恶性”、“恶毒”、“棘手”、“侵略性”的邪恶问题(Rittel & Webber, 1973:160)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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