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Resource Center
Myriad Faces Of Tourism 
September 04, 2010
With diverse experiences and research in sustainable tourism, EQUATIONS has the wherewithal to justifiably turn into an advisory...
 
The Equal and Opposite Effect 
August 30, 2010
We have never before witnessed such a huge multi-billion rupee racket as the Commonwealth Games in...
 
State tourism policy scrutinized by various concerned organizations 
August 29, 2010
The second and the final day of the Regional Consultation on Responsible Tourism in the North Eastern States of...
 
NE Tourism conference has an eye for future prospects 
August 26, 2010
A two-day regional consultation on responsible tourism in the North Eastern states of India kicked off this...
 
NE tourism stakeholders to brainstorm at Gangtok for responsible tourism code 
August 25, 2010
A two day regional consultation on ‘responsible tourism’ in the North-eastern region of India organized by...
 
Claiming the Right to Say No
November 30, 2009

Claiming the Right to Say NoIn 2008, the Philosophy Department of Rachol Seminary, Goa, organized a three-day seminar on ‘impact assessment of tourism’ for their second-year students. To understand tourism impacts better, some of the seminarians undertook a field research. At that time, Israeli tourists were a prominent foreign tourist group in Goa and there were growing tensions between Israeli tourists and local people. The Rachol seminarians were keen to study these tensions, activities and behaviour of Israeli tourists and their social, economic, environmental and cultural impacts. Another aim was to enable the students to make links between touristic happenings and their theological studies. The methodology adopted for the study was one of seeing, observing, discussions (Israeli tourists, local population, traders, government officials) and photo documentation. This publication of the  preliminary study conducted by the seminarians retains the style of personal observations, personal narrative, unaltered repetitions, much of the writing unedited without insistence on footnotes and references. The study was as much as an immersion experience as it was a research study. This work, the first of its kind to be undertaken by a group of seminarians, has been supported by Caritas-Goa, Centre for Responsible Tourism, Council for Social Justice and Peace, EQUATIONS and Rachol Seminary. At the time of publishing this study, other tourist groups defined by nationality, are making also headlines due to conflict and tension between expectations and needs of tourists vis-à-vis local communities.

Click here to download 'Claiming the Right to Say No-30 Nov 09-EQUATIONS', 1.73Mb.

Class Code: RGO70

Keywords: Tourists, Goa, India, Tourism

Claiming the Right to Say No