In his follow-up to A Life Stripped Bare, Leo Hickman turns his attention – in The Final Call: Investigating Who Really Pays for Our Holidays -- from his own household and lifestyle to tourism and its impact.
As readers of the earlier book would expect, it's a project Hickman pursues intelligently and thoroughly: instead of visiting a handful of notorious eco-disgrace resorts, he takes in Asia (China, India, Thailand), the Americas (United States, Mexico, Costa Rica), Europe (Estonia, France, Spain, Britain), the Middle East (Dubai) and the aviation industry.
And whether a destination specialises in skiing, sex, golf, shopping, wildlife, clubbing or paradisal beaches, he finds that tourism is usually a “pernicious disease”, wrecking environments, exploiting instead of enriching locals, recklessly consuming resources and accelerating climate change. He provides sensible recommendations, however, on how governments and individual tourists could make travel less toxic.
Other writers might have contented themselves with aloof tut-tutting; what makes The Final Call absorbing as well as persuasive is that Hickman illuminatingly talks to people ranging from fishermen and bar girls to developers and activists.
The Final Call: Investigating Who Really Pays for Our Holidays
Leo Hickman
Eden Project Books/Guardian Books, 2008
-- By John Dugdale
www.guardian.co.uk
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
参与讨论 COMMENTS
我们建议你在评论后署名, 以便其他浏览者能更好地与你交流。你没有必要使用真名,但你的署名将会协助我们维护网站的信息交流畅通。
We suggest you add your name to your comments so that other readers can respond to you more easily. You don’t have to use your real name, but providing a name will help make communication clearer for other forum participants.
除非其他申明,本网站及其内容受知识共享组织的“署名-非商业性使用-禁止演绎"2.0 英国:英格兰和威尔士协议和 2.5 中国大陆协议的保护。
Unless otherwise stated, this work is under Creative Commons' Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 England & Wales License and 2.5 China License.