Negotiating trade-offs between the environment, sustainability and mass tourism amongst guides on Svalbard
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27543Date
2022-04-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Andersen, Trine C.B.Abstract
This paper investigates how guides on Svalbard make sense of their relations to the environment
whilst working with mass tourism. The Arctic is heating up more rapidly than any other part of
the world, and over the last 30 years the effect of climate change has had a large impact on the
environment in the Arctic. The guides as such find themselves living a paradox where their
work destroys the nature that they care about and depend on. This paper analyses empirical
data collected during four months of fieldwork amongst guides in Svalbard. Throughout the
paper, two dimensions are explored: the guides’ relation to and understanding of the environment as well as their ways of caring for it. Building on illustrations of the guides’ preconceptions
of the environment, it is shown how the guides in their everyday life are engaged in pro-environmental practices. These practices are embedded in the guides’ reciprocal relationship with
the environment, where they negotiate between different trade-offs. The guides thus find a way
to navigate the complexity of caring for the environment and working in tourism through their
intimate relation to the environment.
Publisher
Cambridge University PressCitation
Andersen. Negotiating trade-offs between the environment, sustainability and mass tourism amongst guides on Svalbard. Polar Record. 2022;58(2)Metadata
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