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Tourism and the consumption of wildlife : hunting, shooting and sport fishing / edited by Brent Lovelock.

By: Lovelock, Brent.
Contributor(s): Lovelock, Brent.
Series: Contemporary geographies of leisure, tourism and mobility. Publisher: London : Routledge, 2008Description: xix, 290 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9780415403818 (hbk.).Subject(s): Sports and tourism | Wildlife-related recreation industry | Hunting -- Economic aspectsDDC classification: 338.47799
Contents:
Part 1: Introduction and conceptual issues - 1. An introduction to consumptive wildlife tourism - 2. The animal question and the consumption of wildlife - 3. The lure of fly-fishing - Part 2: Historic precedents - 4. The scandinavian sporting tour - 5. Controversies surrounding the ban on wildlife hunting in Kenya: an historical perspective - 6. Game estates and guided hunts: two perspectives on the hunting of red deer - 7. Shooting tigers as leisure in colonial India - Part 3: Impacts of consumptive wildlife tourism - 8. COnservation hunting concepts, Canada's inuit and polar bear hunting - 9. Environmental values of concumptive and non-consumptive marine tourists - 10. The success and sustainability of consumtive wildlife tourism in Africa - 11. Trophy hunting and recreational angling in Namibia: an economic, social and environmental comparison - 12. Welfare foundation for efficient management of wildlife and fish resources for recreational use in Sweden - 13. What happens in a Swedish rural community when the local moose hunt meets hunting tourism ? - 14. Arab falconry: changes, challenges and conservation opportunities of an ancient art - Part 4. Current issues and destination development - 15. Communicating for wildlife management or hunting tourism the case of the Manitoba spring bear hunt - 16. Catch and release tourism: community, culture and consumptive wildlife tourism strategies in rural idaho - 17. Marine fishing tourism in Lofoten, Northern Norway: the management of the fish resources - 18. Footprints in the sand: encounter norms for backcountry river trout anglers in New Zealand - 19. Australia as a safari hunting destination for exotic animals - 20. Conclusion: consumptive wildlife tourism sustainable niche or endangered s[ecies ? - Index.
Item type Current location Shelf location Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Main Collection Taylor's Library-TU

Floor 3, Shelf 6 , Side 2, TierNo 4, BayNo 3

338.47799 TOU (Browse shelf) 1 Available SHTEx,70005,03,RM 5000046171

Includes index.

Part 1: Introduction and conceptual issues - 1. An introduction to consumptive wildlife tourism - 2. The animal question and the consumption of wildlife - 3. The lure of fly-fishing - Part 2: Historic precedents - 4. The scandinavian sporting tour - 5. Controversies surrounding the ban on wildlife hunting in Kenya: an historical perspective - 6. Game estates and guided hunts: two perspectives on the hunting of red deer - 7. Shooting tigers as leisure in colonial India - Part 3: Impacts of consumptive wildlife tourism - 8. COnservation hunting concepts, Canada's inuit and polar bear hunting - 9. Environmental values of concumptive and non-consumptive marine tourists - 10. The success and sustainability of consumtive wildlife tourism in Africa - 11. Trophy hunting and recreational angling in Namibia: an economic, social and environmental comparison - 12. Welfare foundation for efficient management of wildlife and fish resources for recreational use in Sweden - 13. What happens in a Swedish rural community when the local moose hunt meets hunting tourism ? - 14. Arab falconry: changes, challenges and conservation opportunities of an ancient art - Part 4. Current issues and destination development - 15. Communicating for wildlife management or hunting tourism the case of the Manitoba spring bear hunt - 16. Catch and release tourism: community, culture and consumptive wildlife tourism strategies in rural idaho - 17. Marine fishing tourism in Lofoten, Northern Norway: the management of the fish resources - 18. Footprints in the sand: encounter norms for backcountry river trout anglers in New Zealand - 19. Australia as a safari hunting destination for exotic animals - 20. Conclusion: consumptive wildlife tourism sustainable niche or endangered s[ecies ? - Index.