Sustainable Tourism Cheat Sheet
The core ideas of Sustainable Tourism distilled into a single, scannable reference — perfect for review or quick lookup.
Quick Reference
Ecotourism
Responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment, sustains the well-being of local people, and involves interpretation and education. Ecotourism is typically small-scale, low-impact, and directed toward protected or ecologically sensitive areas.
Overtourism
The condition in which tourism exceeds the physical, ecological, social, economic, or psychological capacity of a destination, resulting in degraded visitor experiences, environmental damage, and reduced quality of life for residents.
Carrying Capacity
The maximum number of tourists that a destination can accommodate without causing unacceptable deterioration to its physical environment, degradation of visitor experience, or adverse impact on the host community's quality of life.
Community-Based Tourism (CBT)
A form of tourism where local residents, often in rural or indigenous communities, invite visitors to experience their culture, environment, and way of life. CBT is owned and managed by the community, with economic benefits distributed locally.
Carbon Offsetting for Travel
The practice of compensating for greenhouse gas emissions from travel, particularly aviation, by funding projects that reduce or remove an equivalent amount of CO2 from the atmosphere, such as reforestation, renewable energy, or methane capture projects.
Leakage in Tourism
The proportion of tourism revenue that leaves the host destination's economy through payments for imported goods, repatriation of profits by foreign-owned businesses, and wages sent home by non-local workers. In developing countries, leakage can exceed 80% of tourism revenue.
Regenerative Tourism
An approach that goes beyond minimizing negative impacts to actively improving the environmental, social, and cultural conditions of a destination. Regenerative tourism aims to leave places better than they were found.
Responsible Travel
An approach to tourism in which travelers make conscious choices to minimize their negative impact and maximize their positive contribution, including respecting local customs, supporting local businesses, reducing waste, and being mindful of their environmental footprint.
Green Globe Certification
An international certification program for sustainable tourism businesses and destinations based on criteria aligned with the Global Sustainable Tourism Council standards. It assesses environmental management, social responsibility, and cultural heritage preservation.
Dark Tourism Ethics
The ethical considerations surrounding tourism to sites associated with death, tragedy, or suffering, such as war memorials, disaster sites, and former conflict zones. Sustainable approaches prioritize education, commemoration, and respect over sensationalism.
Key Terms at a Glance
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