The growing role and relevance of tourism in cities – and of cities in tourism – has in recent decades emerged as a topic of great interest to scholars across many social sciences disciplines. Yet, while urban tourism research has flourished, various issues relating to tourism in metropolitan contexts are in need of greater scholarly engagement.

What forms does tourism take in today’s metropolises and metropolitan regions? How do these forms differ from tourism in other urban contexts? Are these differences significant enough to warrant the classification of ‘metropolitan tourism’ as a distinct type of urban tourism? What are their implications for policy and planning processes? How do policy and planning processes in different metropolises and metropolitan regions differ from each other, and what can they learn from each other? And finally, how could tourism in metropolises and metropolitan regions be made more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive?

Given the importance widely attributed to major metropolises and metropolitan regions as contemporary engines of economic development, innovation, and change, the widespread portrayal of tourism as a leading economic and social force of the 21st century, and the fact that the world's large metropolitan areas are key recipients of tourism flows, it is surprising how little systematic attention is paid to tourism in metropolitan contexts. This book aims to fill these gaps.

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Tourism as a metropolitan phenomenon: legacies, turning points and prospects
Maria Gravari-Barbas, Sébastien Jacquot, Maja Jović, Johannes Novy

PART 1: The spatiality of metropolitan tourism

Introduction to part 1
Maria Gravari-Barbas, Sébastien Jacquot, Maja Jović and Johannes Novy
1. Madrid, Metropolitan Tourism Transformation
María García-Hernández and Manuel de la Calle-Vaquero
2. Los Angeles, Inhabiting the Tourist Metapolis
Leopold Lucas
3. The phenomenon of the spatial organisation of metropolitan tourism:
the case of St. Petersburg

Valery Gordin, Anastasiia Polomarchuk and Anastasiia Korman
4. Metropolitan tourism and urban redevelopment in South Africa: Creating uneven geographies?
Gustav Visser
5. The global metropolis as a tourism and leisure playground: megaprojects in Kuala Lumpur metropolitan space
Frédéric Bouchon
6. Palermo Soho: urban transformation, metropolitan lifestyles, and tourism in the creation of a trendy neighbourhood in the city of Buenos Aires
Mercedes González Bracco
7. Thanatourism in London and the Metropolitan Imaginary
Pippa Catterall


PART 2: Politics and Governance of Metropolitan Tourism

Introduction to part 2
Maria Gravari-Barbas, Sébastien Jacquot, Maja Jović and Johannes Novy

8. Fragmented Dynamics of Touristification and Urban Development in the Metropolis of Paris
Tim Freytag, Florian Weber and Nora Winsky

9. Tourism and the New York Metropolitan Region: Chaos, compromise and Collaboration
Jill Simone Gross

10. Tourism, Planification and Metropolises in 21st Century China: Jing-Jin-Ji and Yangtze Delta River Cases
Françoise Ged, Chensi Shen, Lian Hu and Chunyan Zhang

11. Constructing metropolitan scales and metropolitan cultural tourism in China’s Greater Bay Area
Jie Li and Honggang Xu

12. Laboratory of Consumption: Macau’s Metropolitan Tourism
Tim Simpson
13. The impossible joint governance? Tourism and metropolises in the Shanghai megalopolis.
Benjamin Taunay


Part 3:Practices and representations of metropolitan tourism

Introduction to part 3
Maria Gravari-Barbas, Sébastien Jacquot, Maja Jović and Johannes Novy

14. From Forgotten Borders to New Centralities: Emerging Tourism Practices and Concepts in São Paulo (Brazil)
Camila Cardoso Ribeiro, Paulo Tácio Aires Ferreira, Thiago Allis and Reinaldo Tadeu Boscolo Pacheco

15. Tokyo as a Tourism Metropolis
Eranga Ranaweerage, Taiyo Yagasaki and Toshio Kikuchi
16. Beyond The Gateway of India: Pertinent and Misplaced Narratives of 21st Century Mumbai’s Tourism Bhagyasshree Ramakrishna and Shruthi Ramesh
17. Tourists in the many-sided metropolis
Robert Pascoe and Chris McConville

18. Tourists of the Metropolis: Vertical recreation between West and East
Desmond Wee

19. Destination Metropolis: from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-first Centuries
Ulrike Zitzlspergger


Conclusion
Maria Gravari-Barbas, Sébastien Jacquot, Maja Jović and Johannes Novy

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781915445261
Publisert
2026-01-22
Utgiver
University of Westminster Press
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
538

Biografisk notat

Maria Gravari-Barbas is a professor of Geography at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University, France. Trained as an architect and social geographer, her research focuses on urban and metropolitan transformations in relation to heritagization, gentrification, and tourism. She is the Director of EIREST, a multidisciplinary research team dedicated to tourism studies. Since 2009, she has been the director of the UNESCO Chair at Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University and the coordinator of the UNITWIN network Tourism, Culture, Development. Maria is also the Head of the PhD programme in Cultural Heritage at the European University Alliance Una Europa.

Sébastien Jacquot is a lecturer in geography at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne at the Institute for Research and Studies in Tourism (IREST). Since 2020 he is the director of IREST. He is a member of the EA EIREST interdisciplinary research team in tourism, and an associate member of the UMR PRODIG. He is co-responsible for the Heritage Working Group of the Labex Dynamite, member of the UNITWIN network attached to the UNESCO Chair Culture, Tourism, Development. His research is in line with social and urban geography, and focuses on heritage policies, World Heritage and intangible heritage, tourism and digital social networks, tourism observation, metropolitan tourism, heritage from below, globalization and circulations.

Maja Jović is Assistant Head of School of Architecture + Cities at the University of Westminster and Director of Interdisciplinarity and Collaboration. With a background in architecture, her work spans architecture, heritage, tourism, and critical urban studies. She co-founded and co-leads the MA Architecture and Sustainable Heritage programme. Her recent research explores tourism’s role in metropolitan transformation, diasporic communities in metropolises, heritage safeguarding in (post)conflict environments, and the preservation of urban creative capital. Beyond academia, she advises cultural consultancies and branding agencies on urban and tourism development, adaptive reuse of heritage sites, and heritage policies. She contributes as a critic to architecture studios and international competitions, serves on scientific committees and editorial boards, curates exhibitions, and organises workshops and conferences.

Johannes Novy is a senior lecturer at the University of Westminster, where he leads the MA Urban and Regional Planning program. His research focuses on urban planning theory, politics, tourism, and leisure consumption. He has (co-)authored or edited numerous scholarly publications, but also writes for non-academic audiences, and engages in various professional activities beyond academia, e.g. as consultant or advisor in the realms of urban and tourism development, planning, and policy. He serves on the Curatorial board of the Internationale Bauausstellung Stuttgart-Region 2027 and is part of the European Commission's New European Bauhaus Facility expert group.