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Touristification

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Touristification is a process by which a place changes as it becomes an object of tourist consumption.[1] It leads to negative implications for the touristified place and has received both informal and formal opposition.

Cause

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Touristification has come about as transport has improved. In the modern age, it is quicker and cheaper to travel than ever, leading to more international (and national) trips such as city breaks.[1]

Housing

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A sign in Greek saying "No to Airbnb"

The growth of the peer-to-peer rental market (platforms such as Airbnb) have led to the touristification of housing in many cities, with the peer-to-peer market now present in almost every European city.[1] The growth in peer-to-peer holiday rentals is becoming a 'gentrification battlefront' both in the Global North and South.[2]

In the peer-to-peer rental market, individuals can occasionally rent out the homes in which they live through a platform such as Airbnb. However, these platforms have been criticised for allowing investors and landlords to set up permanent holiday rentals in homes which would otherwise form part of the local housing stock. This is a form of gentrification, as local city dwellers are displaced from their homes (or districts) to cater for the needs of affluent (in this case, transient and mobile) people.[2] Lestégas refers to districts which have become dominated by holiday rentals as airbnbarrios.[3]

The production of a short-term rental housing market in cities became pivotal in the early 2000s. This came about due to the increasing importance of digital technologies in the economy, and a drive by capital to extract more value from the city.[3]

Solastalgia

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Solastalgia is the collective melancholia that a community feels when its space is touristified. Solastalgic people feel deprived when their daily activities are altered or restricted to cater for a more affluent tourist class and yearn for the past pre-mass tourism.[4][5]

Opposition

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Touristification has received protests from negatively affected groups. In some cities, anti-Airbnb billboards have appeared.[3] In some cases, cities across the world have directly taken on Airbnb and similar organisations. In August 2021, Barcelona became the first city to ban short-term private room rentals.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "How touristification is destroying European cities". Bondora Blog. 2019-10-31. Retrieved 2022-05-18.
  2. ^ a b Gant, Agustín Cócola (August 2016). "Holiday Rentals: The New Gentrification Battlefront". Sociological Research Online. 21 (3): 112–120. doi:10.5153/sro.4071. hdl:10451/35706. ISSN 1360-7804. S2CID 151864338.
  3. ^ a b c Semi, Giovanni; Tonetta, Marta (October 2021). "Marginal hosts: Short-term rental suppliers in Turin, Italy". Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space. 53 (7): 1630–1651. doi:10.1177/0308518X20912435. ISSN 0308-518X. S2CID 216235487.
  4. ^ Lalicic, Lidija (May 2020). "Solastalgia: An application in the overtourism context". Annals of Tourism Research. 82: 102766. doi:10.1016/j.annals.2019.102766. S2CID 202316545.
  5. ^ Ojeda, Antonio B.; Kieffer, Maxime (October 2020). "Touristification. Empty concept or element of analysis in tourism geography?". Geoforum. 115: 143–145. doi:10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.06.021. PMC 7334930. PMID 32834079. S2CID 220334614.
  6. ^ Erdem, Suna (2021-11-04). "The cities hitting back at Airbnb". The New European. Retrieved 2022-05-18.