Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1007308 Annals of Tourism Research 2013 23 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article provides a critical realist perspective on the juncture between tourism and crime in a city in Far Northern Queensland, Australia. The results of empirical studies into alcohol-related assault and sexual assault are presented and a micro-level study of the responses of the public safety community to assaults involving backpacker tourists in Cairns is reported. Backpacker motivations and values, the hidden sensitivities of tourism stakeholders to the projection of negative destination images, and the turn to a crime prevention framework are found as enduring tendencies in the data. Retroduction is applied to derive underlying mechanisms that offer an explanation of the public safety network responses in Cairns to assaults involving backpacker tourists. The mechanisms are ‘un-reconciled tensions’, ‘acquiescence of transgression’, and ‘collusion of denial’. We summarize our realist explanations and consider their implications for other backpacker contexts.

► Locates the crime/tourism nexus within the governance shift to private security. ► Based in empirical evidence of violence in backpacker experience. ► Demonstrates the formation of an explanatory account using retroductive processes. ► Introduces the tourism academy to critical realism and its research application.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management
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