Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty: A Theoretical Introduction and Research Agenda for Arctic Contexts
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Purpose and Relevance
1.2. Theoretical Background
1.2.1. Foundational Views of Sovereignty
1.2.2. Addressing the Dimensionality of Sovereignty
“Sovereignty is not an extraneously existing object but is a living process, it foregrounds the conscientious building and maintaining of relationships between people, institutions, technologies, ecosystems, and landscapes across multiple scales. It provokes more attention to the how of systemic change than to the what.”[25] (p. 483)
1.2.3. Tourism, Sovereignty, and Livelihood Sovereignty
2. A Research Agenda for Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Term | Sample Definition | Implications for Tourism Research |
---|---|---|
Indigenous Sovereignty | “The authority and obligation of people within an indigenous polity to determine the extent and nature of their governing authority with regard to their territories and one another” [30] (p. 239). | “Sovereignty must limit hospitality”—implies political empowerment of Native Hawaiians enabled by visualizing occupation and allowing tourists to contemplate their role in colonialization [49] (p. 680). |
Food Sovereignty | “The right of peoples to healthy and culturally appropriate food produced through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to define their own food and agriculture systems” [64] (para 3). | Using tourism to highlight traditional food systems in ways that promote community empowerment [65]. |
Cultural Sovereignty | “The effort of Indian nations and Indian people to exercise their own norms and values in structuring their collective futures” [33] (p. 196). | Self-commodification, or “a set of beliefs and practices in which an individual chooses to construct a marketable identity product while striving to avoid alienating him- or herself” [50] (p. 381). |
Data Sovereignty | “Indigenous data sovereignty is the right of Indigenous people, including AIAN (American Indian and Alaska Native), to govern data collection, ownership, and) application of their own data” [35] (p. 728). | Tourism scholars should enter data-sharing agreements, allow for local ownership of material and data, inclusion of local and Indigenous peoples as coauthors, and support for the restriction of data (no known citations in the tourism literature; see [35] for broader guidelines). |
Intellectual Sovereignty | “a way of recognizing the important influences of economics, gender, and the politics of publishing and the academy, but would not automatically dismiss someone because of such influences” [66] (p. 11). | Enable Arctic communities to conduct their own research, as stated here: “We have seen research principles go from research on Inuit to research with Inuit, but it is high time we witnessed research by Inuit for Inuit” [67] (p. 29). (no known citations in the tourism literature). |
Livelihood Sovereignty | The enhanced levels of local resident control and influence over management institutions and decision making regarding the persistence of valued traditional practices, how new production opportunities are integrated into socio-ecological systems, and how local community wellbeing is perpetuated over time. * | Local control over tourism development leading to agency, autonomy, and self-reliance over tourism livelihoods. (no known citations in the tourism literature). |
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Naylor, R.S.; Hunt, C.A. Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty: A Theoretical Introduction and Research Agenda for Arctic Contexts. Societies 2021, 11, 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030105
Naylor RS, Hunt CA. Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty: A Theoretical Introduction and Research Agenda for Arctic Contexts. Societies. 2021; 11(3):105. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030105
Chicago/Turabian StyleNaylor, Ryan S., and Carter A. Hunt. 2021. "Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty: A Theoretical Introduction and Research Agenda for Arctic Contexts" Societies 11, no. 3: 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030105
APA StyleNaylor, R. S., & Hunt, C. A. (2021). Tourism and Livelihood Sovereignty: A Theoretical Introduction and Research Agenda for Arctic Contexts. Societies, 11(3), 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc11030105