Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights

Tourism for development has become an essential research field in its own right, also in Southeast Asia. Researchers and scholars within the region, but more broadly from around the world, dedicate themselves to understanding how to use tourism most efficiently as a development strategy. Much of thi...

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Main Authors: Dolezal, Claudia, Trupp, Alexander *, Prasit, Leepreecha
Format: Book Section
Published: Routledge 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1288/
https://www.routledge.com/Tourism-and-Development-in-Southeast-Asia-1st-Edition/Dolezal-Trupp-Bui/p/book/9780367209254
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429264191
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Institution: Sunway University
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spelling my.sunway.eprints.12882020-10-12T07:37:36Z http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1288/ Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights Dolezal, Claudia Trupp, Alexander * Prasit, Leepreecha TX Home economics Tourism for development has become an essential research field in its own right, also in Southeast Asia. Researchers and scholars within the region, but more broadly from around the world, dedicate themselves to understanding how to use tourism most efficiently as a development strategy. Much of this research is based on anthropological approaches, with field work as the prime method employed. However, very little has been said about the challenges that researchers with different positionalities encounter in the field, such as access to the field, language or working with interpreters, and power relations. This chapter therefore debates these challenges and points towards ways to address these by drawing on examples from the authors’ fieldwork in foreign and familiar fields. Examples include discussions on the above-mentioned challenges, with a specific focus on the emic versus etic perspective, also seen as the ‘insider-outsider’ debate. In doing so, the chapter demonstrates that there is no ‘ideal’ position from which to do research in the Southeast Asia. It deromanticises the idea of fieldwork at home as delivering more truthful accounts of the field and, finally, points towards the need for reflexivity in order to make our field research in Southeast Asia more robust and effective. Routledge Dolezal, Claudia Trupp, Alexander * Huong, T. Bui 2020-04-07 Book Section PeerReviewed Dolezal, Claudia and Trupp, Alexander * and Prasit, Leepreecha (2020) Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights. In: Tourism and Development in Southeast Asia. Routledge, London, pp. 41-56. ISBN 9780367209254 https://www.routledge.com/Tourism-and-Development-in-Southeast-Asia-1st-Edition/Dolezal-Trupp-Bui/p/book/9780367209254 https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429264191
institution Sunway University
building Sunway Campus Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Sunway University
content_source Sunway Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/
topic TX Home economics
spellingShingle TX Home economics
Dolezal, Claudia
Trupp, Alexander *
Prasit, Leepreecha
Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
description Tourism for development has become an essential research field in its own right, also in Southeast Asia. Researchers and scholars within the region, but more broadly from around the world, dedicate themselves to understanding how to use tourism most efficiently as a development strategy. Much of this research is based on anthropological approaches, with field work as the prime method employed. However, very little has been said about the challenges that researchers with different positionalities encounter in the field, such as access to the field, language or working with interpreters, and power relations. This chapter therefore debates these challenges and points towards ways to address these by drawing on examples from the authors’ fieldwork in foreign and familiar fields. Examples include discussions on the above-mentioned challenges, with a specific focus on the emic versus etic perspective, also seen as the ‘insider-outsider’ debate. In doing so, the chapter demonstrates that there is no ‘ideal’ position from which to do research in the Southeast Asia. It deromanticises the idea of fieldwork at home as delivering more truthful accounts of the field and, finally, points towards the need for reflexivity in order to make our field research in Southeast Asia more robust and effective.
author2 Dolezal, Claudia
author_facet Dolezal, Claudia
Dolezal, Claudia
Trupp, Alexander *
Prasit, Leepreecha
format Book Section
author Dolezal, Claudia
Trupp, Alexander *
Prasit, Leepreecha
author_sort Dolezal, Claudia
title Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
title_short Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
title_full Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
title_fullStr Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
title_full_unstemmed Researching tourism and development in Southeast Asia: Methodological insights
title_sort researching tourism and development in southeast asia: methodological insights
publisher Routledge
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1288/
https://www.routledge.com/Tourism-and-Development-in-Southeast-Asia-1st-Edition/Dolezal-Trupp-Bui/p/book/9780367209254
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429264191
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