Alba E. Gámez
Autonomous University of Baja California
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Featured researches published by Alba E. Gámez.
Journal of Borderlands Studies | 2010
Alba E. Gámez; Manuel Ángeles
Abstract Tourism in Baja California Sur (BCS, in the Baja California Peninsula in Northern Mexico) can be understood as an example of the internationalization of the services sector and the integration of relatively isolated regions to the processes of the global market, particularly that of the United States. The success of the Los Cabos corridor (between San Jose del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas in the southernmost tip of BCS), as one of the most dynamic tourist spaces in Mexico, has been central to this trend in the state. Subscribing to a flexible understanding of borders (Brunnet‐Jailly 2005) that goes beyond geographical boundaries, this growth has implied a restructuring of intra and interregional interaction patterns not just in Los Cabos but in the whole state. International tourism has fostered internal borders in BCS, due to the enclave nature of tourism growth as expressed by increasing investment concentration, income inequality, and social exclusion. This article analyzes the effects and perspectives of a tourism growth that is tightly related to the US market, has changed demographic patterns locally, and has increased opportunities for BCS, even though the growth has also made BCS more vulnerable to negative external impacts, including environmental deterioration, intraregional economic disparities and social exclusion. The text is divided into three sections: the first addresses the economic importance of tourism internationally and for Mexico; the second part highlights the most recent patterns in the sectors performance in BCS, to which Los Cabos as the states most important tourist destination is crucial; and the third reflects upon the relationship between growth and development as they are linked to tourism in the region. A call is made about the need to reconsider how to sustain growth while changing the development of negative tourism‐related patterns, a concern that government officials, private investors and the local community should share and act upon.
Archive | 2018
Alba E. Gámez; Antonina Ivanova; Eduardo Juárez
Climate and economic change put pressure on the use of natural resources, which in turn increases the vulnerability of ecosystems and human communities. This makes social participation essential for biodiversity conservation. This chapter addresses community perceptions on adaptation to climate change in El Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve (REBIVI), in Baja California Sur (Mexico), one of the largest natural protected areas in Latin America. Workshops with local producers and community representatives show the need to increase knowledge on climate change issues and strengthen institutional and legal capacities to facilitate the implementation and monitoring of adaptation actions. At the same time, experiences already in place in REBIVI (such as whale watching, mangrove recovery, and bighorn sheep hunting) demonstrate that a responsible use of biodiversity can contribute both to conservation and community welfare and provide grounds to pursue alternative economic and social ways to relate to nature. Yet, economic growth models and the community members’ heterogeneous capabilities to better adapt to climate change and strengthen their capacities for action need to be taken into account if both human welfare and conservation are to be effectively promoted.
Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development | 2010
Tamar Diana Wilson; Alba E. Gámez
Archive | 2010
Manuel Ángeles; Alba E. Gámez; Antonina Ivanova
Sociedad y Ambiente | 2018
Edgar Ibarra-Núñez; Alba E. Gámez; Alfredo Ortega-Rubio
Journal of Hydrology | 2018
Jobst Wurl; Alba E. Gámez; Antonina Ivanova; Miguel Imaz Lamadrid; Pablo Hernández-Morales
Región y Sociedad | 2014
Alba E. Gámez; Jobst Wurl; Juan Carlos Graciano
Ciudades | 2014
Manuel Ángeles; Alba E. Gámez
Turismo y Desarrollo Local | 2011
Alba E. Gámez; Antonina Ivanova; Tamar Diana Wilson
Iztapalapa: Revista de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades | 2011
Manuel Ángeles; Alba E. Gámez; Antonina Ivanova