Over the last couple of decades, polar tourism has significantly grown in the number of visitors and diversified in terms of the tourism activities offered. The COVID-19 pandemic brought polar tourism to a halt and has prompted researchers, operators and policy-makers alike to reflect on how Arctic and Antarctic tourism have developed, how they are being managed and governed and, importantly, how tourism operators influence polar socio-ecological systems. Given the dominance of ship-based tourism over other types of tourism in the Polar Regions, we discuss the cornerstones of how polar ship-based tourism has developed over the last 50 years and explore the relevant international and regional governance regimes in this article. We identify which positive and negative biophysical, socio-cultural and economic impacts arising from polar tourism have been identified by researchers. It is difficult, if not impossible, to disentangle impacts caused by tourism alone from those that result from the interactions of multiple pressures at all levels (local, regional and global), and more research is needed to develop reliable and effective indicators to monitor tourism impacts. In addition, a better understanding is needed about the role tourist experiences might play in potentially encouraging long-term positive behavioural changes among visitors to the Polar Regions. The COVID-19 pandemic has provided an important opportunity to review polar tourism development and management, and to ask whether an emphasis should be placed on ‘degrowth’ of the sector in the future.
Review
The future of sustainable polar ship-based tourism
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- 21 March 2023, e21
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The role of macroalgal habitats as ocean acidification refugia within coastal seascapes
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- 21 March 2023, e22
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Climate-smart socially innovative tools and approaches for marine pollution science in support of sustainable development
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- 22 March 2023, e23
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Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene
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- 27 March 2023, e24
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The role of art in coastal and marine sustainability
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- 31 March 2023, e25
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Research Article
Quantifying reef-derived sediment generation: Introducing the SedBudget methodology to support tropical coastline and island vulnerability studies
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- 20 April 2023, e26
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Integrated watershed management solutions for healthy coastal ecosystems and people
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- 05 May 2023, e27
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Benefits of genetic data for spatial conservation planning in coastal habitats
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- 11 May 2023, e28
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Corrigendum
Integrated watershed management solutions for healthy coastal ecosystems and people — Corrigendum
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- 23 June 2023, e29
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The present, past and future of blue carbon
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- 08 June 2023, e30
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Quantifying reef-derived sediment generation: Introducing the SedBudget methodology to support tropical coastline and island vulnerability studies – Addendum
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- 04 July 2023, e31
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Coastal futures: New framings, many questions, some ways forward
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- 04 July 2023, e32
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On the formation of coastal rogue waves in water of variable depth
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- 13 July 2023, e33
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Past changes in and present status of the coastal carbon cycle
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- 07 August 2023, e34
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The coming perfect storm: Diminishing sustainability of coastal human–natural systems in the Anthropocene
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- 10 August 2023, e35
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Toward equitable coastal community resilience: Incorporating principles of equity and justice in coastal hazard adaptation
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- 14 August 2023, e36
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Social science to accelerate coastal adaptation to sea-level rise
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- 29 August 2023, e37
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The challenges of fieldwork: Improving the experience for women in coastal sciences
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- 19 September 2023, e38
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Quantifying the ecological consequences of climate change in coastal ecosystems
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- 19 October 2023, e39
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Research Article
Households’ readiness and community-based organisations’ role in flood management: The case of Freetown City’s coastal area
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- 06 November 2023, e40
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