ScienceDirect - Annals of Tourism Research : Competing industries in islands a new tourism approach
Competing industries in islands a new tourism approach Mark P. Hamptona, and John Christensenb aUniversity of Kent, UKbTax Justice Network, UK Submitted 27 March 2006. Resubmitted 19 December 2006. Resubmitted 9 March 2007. Final version 18 April 2007. Accepted 26 May 2007. Refereed anonymously. Coordinating Editor: David H. Harrison. Available online 22 September 2007. AbstractMany islands host both tourism and offshore finance, but their coexistence has been little researched. This paper examines their relationship via a case study of the British Channel Island of Jersey. Both sectors require labor, land, and capital--all frequently scarce in small islands. The study considers the nature of the relationship and resource competition. In light of the unusual context of small polities and the political power of external actors, it also analyzes the dynamics of tourism, offshore finance, and the state in islands. The overall impact of the relationship between tourism and offshore finance is further examined, to suggest how this affects islands' economic development.
Competing industries in islands a new tourism approach Mark P. Hamptona, and John Christensenb
Mark P. Hamptona, and John Christensenb
aUniversity of Kent, UK
bTax Justice Network, UK Submitted 27 March 2006. Resubmitted 19 December 2006. Resubmitted 9 March 2007. Final version 18 April 2007. Accepted 26 May 2007. Refereed anonymously. Coordinating Editor: David H. Harrison. Available online 22 September 2007. Abstract
Many islands host both tourism and offshore finance, but their coexistence has been little researched. This paper examines their relationship via a case study of the British Channel Island of Jersey. Both sectors require labor, land, and capital--all frequently scarce in small islands. The study considers the nature of the relationship and resource competition. In light of the unusual context of small polities and the political power of external actors, it also analyzes the dynamics of tourism, offshore finance, and the state in islands. The overall impact of the relationship between tourism and offshore finance is further examined, to suggest how this affects islands' economic development.