Visitor management in the public planning policy context: A case study of Cambridge
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- case study
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Sustainable Tourism
- Vol. 2 (4) , 221-230
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09669589409510700
Abstract
Visitor management plans are increasingly seen by local authorities as an essential contribution they can make towards sustainable tourism. However, tourism is subject to many external influences and is only part of the system of activities and land uses at the destination. Successful visitor management must, therefore, be broadly based and rooted in a wide range of policies. The objectives for sustainable tourism in Cambridge are supported by policies at the European, national, regional, county and local level covering tourism, recreation, transport, the environment, land use and economic development. This results in an integrated policy framework that ensures consistency, encourages cooperation and long‐term planning, makes the best use of resources, opens up additional sources of finance and provides a firm justification for refusing undesirable development. Achieving integration requires the visitor management plan to be seen neither as an end nor as a beginning, but as part of a process. In Cambridge this has involved a commitment to monitoring and reviewing strategies and to ensuring a policy input on tourism issues at all levels of decision making. Appropriate ad hoc bodies have been set up. Visitor management cannot succeed in isolation: other policies must be made to work for it, not frustrate action.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Some Fundamental Truths About Tourism: Understanding Tourism's Social and Environmental ImpactsJournal of Sustainable Tourism, 1993