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Use of the Figures to Facilitate Tutorials/Discussion
To assist you with the preparation of lectures, tutorials and student discussion, the figures from the book are available here as part of a PowerPoint presentation.. Each slide is annotated with some ideas and guidance on the use of the material in lectures and as aid to structure tutorials as a follow up exercise are provided.
To supplement this you may also like to look at the selection of 35mm slides available to illustrate lectures, tutorials with specific themes in the course you are teaching.
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Fig 1.1 The Classification of Tourists
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Fig. 1.2 Leiper’s Tourism System
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Fig 1.3 The growth of international tourism since 1950
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Fig 1.4 A framework for tourism management
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Fig 2.1 Grand Tour Routes in Europe 1661 - 1700
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Fig 2.2 Grand Tour Routes in Europe 1814- 1820
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2.3 The resort life cycle
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Fig 2.4 The development of selected leisure destinations in the eastern USA by the mid C19th
(source: An Historical Geography of Recreation and Tourism, J.Towner, 1996. © John Wiley and Sons Ltd. Reproduced with permission
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Fig 2.5 The growth of tourism in Spain
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Fig 3.1 Concept map for understanding tourist behaviour (source: Tourist Behaviour, P.Pearce, 2005 © Channel View Publishers). Reproduced with permission.
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Fig 3.2 Determinants of tourism demand
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Fig 3.3 Maslow’s Hierarchy of individual needs
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Fig 3.4 Plog’s psychographic traveller types
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Fig 3.5 The relationship between needs, motivations, preferences and goals in individual holiday choice
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Fig 4.1 A typical tourism supply chain
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Fig 4.2 The characteristics of adventure tourism
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Fig 4.3 The role of transport in tourist travel
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Fig 5.1 Hypothetical example of the impact of railway technology on the growth of coastal tourism in Victorian and
Edwardian England
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Fig 5.2 Tourist travel from origin to destination area and return
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Fig 5.3 A tour with an itinerary, visiting different areas
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Fig 5.4 The UK rail passenger industry structure(source: Page, 2002; © Mintel
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Fig 5.5 Map showing the Megabus routes
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Fig 5.6 Schematic diagram of the steamer routes operated by the Peninsular and Orient (P&O) Steam Navigation
Company in 1890
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Fig 6.1 The dimensions of the air transport sector
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Fig 6.2 Hub and spoke operation
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Fig 6.3 Hub and spoke service with point-to-point services
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Fig 6.4 The main costs in operating an airline
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Fig 7.1 Accommodation as a product
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Fig 8.1 How tour operators link the elements of a holiday together to produce, assemble and distribute the package
to the consumer
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Fig 8.2 Planning horizon for a tour operator’s summer programme
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Fig 8.3 A hypothetical W flight pattern for charter aircraft
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Fig 8.4 Structure of inclusive holiday brochures
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Fig 8.5 The travel agent-client purchase process
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Fig 8.6 The future of travel retailing
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Fig 9.1 Tourism and regeneration
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Fig 9.2 The three levels of a product
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Fig 9.3 Gunn’s model of a tourist attraction
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Fig 9.4 A garden as a visitor attraction product
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Fig 9.5 The product life cycle
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Fig 11.1 The policy making process in tourism
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Fig 11.2 The structure of tourism administration in the UK
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Fig 11.3 The Scottish Tourism Framework for Action 2002-2005
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Fig 11.4 The VisitScotland brand essence wheel. © VisitScotland, reproduced with permission
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Fig 11.5 The destination marketing process for National Tourist Organisations
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Fig 12.1 Inter-regional passenger flows by air on the Association of
Asia-Pacific Airlines April 2004- March 2005
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Fig 12.2 Top fifteen intra-European country pairs in 1999
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Fig 12.3 Potter’s impact of tourism framework
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Fig 12.4 The economic impact of tourism spending in an urban area
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Fig 12.6 The social and cultural impacts of tourism
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Fig 13.1 International tourism development in developing countries
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Fig 13.2 Tourism growth and development – snowball concept
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Fig 13.3 The ‘amoeba’ concept of tourism