{"title":"旅游业恢复中的社会公正:审查加拿大旅游业恢复政策中的公平、多样性和包容性","authors":"Eli Paolo Fresnoza, Devan Balcombe, Laura Choo","doi":"10.1108/trc-07-2023-0018","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\nPurpose\nThe purpose of this paper is to analyze the incorporation, prioritization and depth of equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) initiatives in tourism industry restart policies of Canadian provinces and territories. This study investigates how the detailing of EDI in policies determine the priority in emancipating tourism workers from the inequities exacerbated during the pandemic. Such investigation enables a better understanding of the complexities, tendencies and rationale of involving EDI in the tourism industry’s recovery.\n\n\nDesign/methodology/approach\nThe research investigated the presence and prioritization of equity, diversity, and inclusion using systematic text analytics of 38 publicly available restart plans and statements from 52 government and non-government agencies. Using web-based software Voyant Tools to assist in text analytics, a hybrid deductive-inductive coding approach was conducted.\n\n\nFindings\nKey outcomes from the analysis revealed scarce to no full and dedicated content on EDI as a holistic initiative necessary for tourism industry relaunch. This lack of EDI content was a result of the greater impetus to prioritize economic generation and limited data due to practical and ideological issues. Results also suggested the tokenizing of EDI in some policies.\n\n\nResearch limitations/implications\nDifficulties in data used for research include the lack and availability of restart policies specifically for tourism; most policies were generalized and referred to economic recovery as a whole. Studies of tourism-specific EDI issues were also limited.\n\n\nOriginality\nThe research is revelatory for investigating EDI prioritizations in restart policies even among well-developed and worker-diverse tourism industries such as in Canada, where inequities and injustices to women, Black, Indigenous, gender-diverse, and newcomer tourism workers among others have been withstanding.\n","PeriodicalId":316276,"journal":{"name":"Tourism Critiques: Practice and Theory","volume":"26 23","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Social justice in tourism recovery: examining equity, diversity, and inclusion in Canadian tourism restart policies\",\"authors\":\"Eli Paolo Fresnoza, Devan Balcombe, Laura Choo\",\"doi\":\"10.1108/trc-07-2023-0018\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\nPurpose\\nThe purpose of this paper is to analyze the incorporation, prioritization and depth of equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) initiatives in tourism industry restart policies of Canadian provinces and territories. This study investigates how the detailing of EDI in policies determine the priority in emancipating tourism workers from the inequities exacerbated during the pandemic. Such investigation enables a better understanding of the complexities, tendencies and rationale of involving EDI in the tourism industry’s recovery.\\n\\n\\nDesign/methodology/approach\\nThe research investigated the presence and prioritization of equity, diversity, and inclusion using systematic text analytics of 38 publicly available restart plans and statements from 52 government and non-government agencies. Using web-based software Voyant Tools to assist in text analytics, a hybrid deductive-inductive coding approach was conducted.\\n\\n\\nFindings\\nKey outcomes from the analysis revealed scarce to no full and dedicated content on EDI as a holistic initiative necessary for tourism industry relaunch. This lack of EDI content was a result of the greater impetus to prioritize economic generation and limited data due to practical and ideological issues. Results also suggested the tokenizing of EDI in some policies.\\n\\n\\nResearch limitations/implications\\nDifficulties in data used for research include the lack and availability of restart policies specifically for tourism; most policies were generalized and referred to economic recovery as a whole. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文旨在分析加拿大各省和地区旅游业重新启动政策中公平、多样性和包容性(EDI)举措的纳入、优先顺序和深度。本研究调查了 EDI 在政策中的细节如何决定将旅游从业人员从大流行病期间加剧的不平等中解放出来的优先次序。这项研究通过对 52 个政府和非政府机构的 38 个公开重启计划和声明进行系统的文本分析,对公平、多样性和包容性的存在和优先性进行了调查。使用网络软件 Voyant Tools 协助进行文本分析,采用了演绎-归纳混合编码方法。研究结果分析的主要结果表明,作为旅游业重新启动所必需的一项整体举措,几乎没有关于电子数据交换的完整而专门的内容。缺乏电子数据交换内容的原因是,优先考虑经济发展的动力较大,而由于实际和意识形态问题,数据有限。研究的局限性/影响研究数据方面的困难包括缺乏专门针对旅游业的重新启动政策;大多数政策都是概括性的,涉及整体经济复苏。该研究对调查重新启动政策中的 EDI 优先权具有启示意义,即使是在加拿大等发达的、工人多样化的旅游业中,妇女、黑人、土著、性别多样化和新移民旅游工人等的不公平和不公正现象也一直存在。
Social justice in tourism recovery: examining equity, diversity, and inclusion in Canadian tourism restart policies
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to analyze the incorporation, prioritization and depth of equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) initiatives in tourism industry restart policies of Canadian provinces and territories. This study investigates how the detailing of EDI in policies determine the priority in emancipating tourism workers from the inequities exacerbated during the pandemic. Such investigation enables a better understanding of the complexities, tendencies and rationale of involving EDI in the tourism industry’s recovery.
Design/methodology/approach
The research investigated the presence and prioritization of equity, diversity, and inclusion using systematic text analytics of 38 publicly available restart plans and statements from 52 government and non-government agencies. Using web-based software Voyant Tools to assist in text analytics, a hybrid deductive-inductive coding approach was conducted.
Findings
Key outcomes from the analysis revealed scarce to no full and dedicated content on EDI as a holistic initiative necessary for tourism industry relaunch. This lack of EDI content was a result of the greater impetus to prioritize economic generation and limited data due to practical and ideological issues. Results also suggested the tokenizing of EDI in some policies.
Research limitations/implications
Difficulties in data used for research include the lack and availability of restart policies specifically for tourism; most policies were generalized and referred to economic recovery as a whole. Studies of tourism-specific EDI issues were also limited.
Originality
The research is revelatory for investigating EDI prioritizations in restart policies even among well-developed and worker-diverse tourism industries such as in Canada, where inequities and injustices to women, Black, Indigenous, gender-diverse, and newcomer tourism workers among others have been withstanding.