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Featured researches published by Jundan Zhang.


Tourism Analysis | 2015

Ordering the Disordered Subject : A Critique Of Chinese Outbound Tourists as New Zealand Seeks to Become China Ready

Jundan Zhang; Eric J. Shelton

Currently, expanding Chinese outbound tourism attracts significant practical research effort utilizing various conceptual approaches in many countries. In this Review Article, J. Zhang and Shelton ...


Tourism Culture & Communication | 2017

The Irreducible Ethics in Reflexivity: Rethinking Reflexivity in Conducting Ethnography in Shangri-La, Southwest China

Jundan Zhang

Because this research started in Shangri-La County in Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Southwest China, I have had different people in different occasions ask me similar questions: Are you a ...


Archive | 2018

How could we be non-Western? Some ontological and epistemological ponderings on Chinese tourism research

Jundan Zhang

Qualitative research in tourism studies has achieved significant popularity and has encouraged researchers to scrutinize their own ontological and epistemological concerns in their decisions on choosing how to go about their research projects and the research ethics they will adopt (Phillimore and Goodson 2004; Tribe et al. 2015; Wilson and Hollinshead 2015). One could say that the critical shifts in theories and methodologies in tourism studies are nurtured mostly through qualitative research, for such qualitative research aims to challenge the positivist paradigm which tends to take things for granted (Phillimore and Goodson 2004). Emerging from calls for non-positivist methodologies are the recent calls also for non-Western ontologies and epistemologies, aiming not only to provide alternative perspectives (other than the Eurocentric perspectives) in understanding tourism worldmaking but also to accommodate the “new tourists” from non-Western regions, in particular, Asia and China.


Archive | 2017

A Political Ecology of the Yellow-eyed Penguin in Southern New Zealand: A Conceptual and Theoretical Approach

Eric J. Shelton; Hazel Tucker; Jundan Zhang

Here, we engage with the political and ecological story of the yellow-eyed penguin (Megadyptes antipodes), a major tourist attraction, during four years of dramatically declining numbers of breeding pairs (New Zealand Department of Conservation in Unpublished census of yellow-eyed penguin breeding pairs 2015–16, 2016). One site, Long Point, is useful for presenting the possibilities of thematic integration since, using the principles of reintroduction biology (Seddon et al. in Conserv Biol 21(2):303–312, 2007; Armstrong and Seddon in Trends Ecol Evol 23:20–25, 2008), it is being used specifically to produce habitat for seabirds, rather than the more traditional restoration ecology approach. Also, the demands of tourism, for example to show respect through product offering (Zhang and Shelton in Tourism Anal 20(3):343–353, 2015) are, from the outset, being reinterpreted and integrated into the design and management of the site. Political ecology of tourism (Mostafanezhad et al. in Political ecology of tourism: communities, power and the environment. Routledge, London, pp 1–22, 2016) potentially is a fruitful analytic tool for formulating such thematic integration of ‘wildlife tourism’, ‘applied ecology’, and ‘environmental education and interpretation’. Political ecology emerged as a critique of an allegedly apolitical cultural ecology and ecological anthropology, and illustrates the unavoidable entanglement of political economy with ecological concerns (Zimmerer in Prog Hum Geogr 32(1):63–78, 2006). Also, political ecology has been described as ‘an urgent kind of argument or text … that examines winners or losers, is narrating using dialectics, begins and/or ends in a contradiction, and surveys both the status of nature and stories about the status of nature’ (Robbins in Political ecology: a critical introduction. Wiley-Blackwell, New York, 2004, p. viii). Relevant examples of such narratives include Shelton and Tucker’s (Tourism Rev Int 11(3):205–212, 2008, p. 198) text that constituted ‘the restoration narrative … central to the long-term viability of tourism in New Zealand because environmental preservation, conservation and restoration facilitate the continuation, and possible expansion, of nature-based tourism’ and Reis and Shelton’s (Tourism Anal 16(3):375–384, 2011, p. i) demonstration that ‘nature-based tourism activities are highly modulated by how Nature has been constructed in modern Western societies.’ It is this textual, discursive approach that differentiates political ecology from other approaches to issues surrounding ‘natural area tourism’, for example, the impacts approach of Newsome et al. (Natural Area Tourism: Ecology, impacts and management. Channel View Publications, Bristol, 2013).


Annals of Tourism Research | 2016

On Western-centrism and “Chineseness” in tourism studies

Hazel Tucker; Jundan Zhang


Journal of China Tourism Research | 2012

Authentic Antipodean Chineseness? A Scholar's Garden in Aotearoa/New Zealand

Jundan Zhang; Eric J. Shelton


TPT.13, V International Seminar Tourism and Spatial Planning, Lisbon, 24-25 January, 2013 | 2013

Political ecology of tourism worldmaking : a case of Shangri-La County, Southwest China

Jundan Zhang


Archive | 2018

Knowing Subjects in an Unknown Place

Jundan Zhang; Hazel Tucker


Journal of Sustainable Tourism | 2018

Tourism and environmental subjectivities in the Anthropocene: observations from Niru Village, Southwest China

Jundan Zhang


Archive | 2016

Knowing subjects in an unkown place: producingidentity through tourism and heritage in Niru Village, Southwest China

Jundan Zhang; Hazel Tucker

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