The other side of paradise

Wendy Sealy, Simon Mouatt
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Abstract

The development of indigenous tourism in the Caribbean is inhibited by several challenges such as the inability to achieve economies of scale and scope through structural and resource constraints. These challenges are further exacerbated by the heavy prominence of transnational conglomerates who own and operate most of the large hotels, airlines, cruise ships, travel agencies and tour operators that market and control tourism on the islands. Foreign domination of the foregoing sectors has contributed to substantial leakage of foreign exchange revenues - weakening exchange rates, social polarization, social exclusion and social degradation. While most Caribbean islands achieved constitutional independence from Europe, this did not necessarily involve a restructuring of economic relationships or a shattering of colonial ideologies. Today, the legacy of slavery and the plantation society underpins much of the regions’ contemporary culture, values and economic relationships despite the attainment of political independence. This paper aims to trace the nature and antecedents of foreign domination and control of Caribbean tourism and explores possible solutions to combat transnational intervention and economic dependency.
天堂的另一边
加勒比土著旅游业的发展受到若干挑战的阻碍,例如由于结构和资源限制而无法实现规模和范围经济。这些挑战因跨国集团的突出地位而进一步加剧,这些集团拥有并经营着岛上销售和控制旅游业的大多数大型酒店、航空公司、游轮、旅行社和旅游经营者。外国对上述部门的支配造成了外汇收入的大量流失- -削弱汇率、社会两极分化、社会排斥和社会退化。虽然大多数加勒比岛屿在宪法上从欧洲获得独立,但这并不一定涉及经济关系的改组或殖民意识形态的粉碎。今天,尽管获得了政治独立,但奴隶制和种植园社会的遗产仍然支撑着该地区的当代文化、价值观和经济关系。本文旨在追踪加勒比旅游的外国统治和控制的性质和先例,并探讨打击跨国干预和经济依赖的可能解决方案。
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