Introduction - University of Massachusetts Amherst



TTRA 2022 Extended Abstract Template: Replace This with Your TitleIntroductionThe simplest way to use this template is to replace the text in this file with your own words using the styles provided as far as possible. This Extended Abstract is written in 12-point Times New Roman and is single-spaced with 6 pts before and after each paragraph. The text is justified to occupy the full line width so that the right margin is not ragged. Submissions to be considered for Oral Presentations, Ideas Fair, Qualitative Research Workshop, or Late-Breaking Work should not exceed 3,000 words. For the Graduate Student Colloquium, each submission’s length should not exceed three single-spaced pages (approximately 1,500 words). References are not included in the page requirement. There should be nothing in the extended abstract that identifies the authors by either name or institution. Any tables and figures should be embedded in the manuscript.Literature ReviewThe Academic Co-Chairs of the 52nd TTRA Annual Conference, Drs. Svetlana Stepchenkova, Kevin Kam Fung So, and Eugene Thomlinson, invite paper submissions from travel and tourism researchers. The conference theme is Regenerative Tourism: Building Resilience. The conference will focus on recovering efforts of the global tourism and hospitality industry and communities to regenerate tourism in the post-pandemic era and at the same time to increase resilience to crises, sustain resources, and distribute more fairly tourism benefits.Currently, TTRA plans to conduct the conference in a hybrid mode, including physical presence and virtual presentation and attendance. A traditional Graduate Student Colloguium will be held online, and PhD students can select to participate in the conference virtually at a reduced rate. The TTRA 2021 Uncharted Territory: Reimagining Tourism in a New Era conference at Fort Worth and our research community's need to address the regenerative travel and tourism post-pandemic helped shape priority areas for the 2022 TTRA conference. Conceptual, quantitative, qualitative, mixed-method, and state-of-the-art papers, as well as data-intensive studies, are invited to address the sub-themes below. Additionally, we welcome submissions that explore lessons learned and contemporary trends in travel and tourism research.The Regenerative TourismRecovering economic indicators impacted by the COVID-19 pandemicRebuilding tourism on more equitable grounds: unpacking issues of representation, equity, diversity, and inclusion in the tourism industryAddressing future challenges of climate change, overtourism, disasters, desease outbreaks, etc.New ways to travel: virtual and augmented realityCommunity ResilienceTourism, participation, self-reliance, and social justiceAdaptation to economic, social, and political changesAddressing human resources crisis: workforce development policies for the futureRemeasuring Success in TourismIssues concerning distribution of benefits from tourism across communities. Going beyond key performance indicators and including residents’ perceptions, both survey-based and holistic accountsBalancing short-term tactics with long-term strategic visionTourism, Happiness, Health, and WellnessPeople-centered tourism: Indigenous people and the control of identity, culture, heritage, land, governance, and futureMarketing and promoting tourism for a better worldCOVID-19 LessonsCrises responses and innovative practices Recovery strategies and emerging opportunities in the new eraFocusing on Data Influenced Decisions to Regenerate Tourism and Build ResilienceData intensive research: datamining, machine-learning, network analysis, and artificial intelligenceConsumer neuroscience and neuromarketingUsing and interpreting “Big Data”While we are particularly interested in submissions that address these sub-themes, papers that explore contemporary trends in travel and tourism research are also welcome (Flannery 2017). We welcome articles using quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods approaches (Holder and Ruhanen 2017). MethodologySubmission details, author guidelines, and document templates can be found at the 2022 TTRA Scholarworks website ( ). See Table 1 for a list of items needed for your submission. Table 1. Required Content for Extended Abstract SubmissionItemContent1.The names, affiliations and contact information of all authors2.The bios for all authors (50 words each)3.The title of your paper4.A short abstract (150 words)5.The body of your extended abstract with no identifier information, utilizing this template. At TTRA 2022, the program will include both traditional Oral Presentation as well as the popular Ideas Fair, an interactive session where academics and practitioners meet as the expert innovators in their field to experience and engage in immersive and interactive multimedia presentations. (Sheldon, Pollock and Daniele 2017).The program will also continue to feature the dynamic and constructive Qualitative Research Workshop and the PhD Student Colloquium. ResultsAll accepted submissions, regardless of the presentation format, will have the opportunity to publish a Short Abstract, Extended Abstract, or Full Paper in the online conference proceeding through Scholarworks. Note that Scholarworks in an indexed open-source digital library, and therefore all the abstracts/papers, will be easily discoverable and downloaded via the internet (Yamamura 2018) and Google Scholar. The final published proceedings will not differentiate between presentation formats.Conclusion and DiscussionFor Author Guidelines, Submission Templates and to submit your abstract, please visit more information on the TTRA Conference, check our website conference/, email us at 2022conference@References (note – the references in this sample are for demonstration purposes only) Flannery, T. (2017). Sunlight and Seaweed: An Argument for How to Feed, Power and Clean Up the World. Melbourne: Text Publishing.Holder, A., and Ruhanen, L. (2017). “Identifying the relative importance of culture in Indigenous tourism experiences: netnographic evidence from Australia.” Tourism Recreation Research, 42(3): 316-326.Sheldon, P. J., Pollock, A., and Daniele, R. (2017). Social Entrepreneurship and Tourism: Setting the Stage. In Sheldon, P., and Danielle, R. (eds) Social Entrepreneurship and Tourism. Tourism on the Verge (pp. 1-18). Springer, Cham.Yamamura, T. (2018). “Pop culture contents and historical heritage: case of heritage revitalization through ‘contents tourism’ in Shiroishi city.” Contemporary Japan, 30(2): 1-20. ................
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