Business and Management INK

Watch the Webinar: Tourism Management under COVID-19

June 2, 2021 2565

In the posted video of the webinar, “Tourism Management under COVID-19: The Research Priority and Changing Publishing Landscape” two senior experts in the business management field, professors Chris Cooper and Haiyan Song, shared their research insights on tourism management with specific guidance to facilitate early career researchers.

Opening the webinar, professor Cooper discussed the research opportunities and priorities that COVID-19 presents to scholars in the tourism sector. He also highlighted the link between COVID-19, climate change, and tourism—with climate hazards exacerbating the impact of the virus (e.g., air pollution), while also highlighting positives such as a reduction in flying. He called this an opportunity for a once-in-a-lifetime chance to build a new tourism that is built on research and is carbon friendly, sustainable, and innovative. He finished with an overview on how COVID-19 impacted the academic publishing landscape in terms, quality, and content of journal submissions.

Professor Song continued with a focus on tourism research amid COVID-19, looking at it both as a crisis and opportunity. He pointed out various research directions with recent journal examples, laying out their research rationales, framing, design, and results. Xuting Wang, manager of commissioning/rights at SAGE Asia-Pacific, finished with guidance to facilitate research and researchers in academic publishing.

Key takeaways from the video include an overview of tourism and pandemics, the identification of research priorities at this time of crisis, the changing publishing landscape of tourism as a result of COVID-19, tourism prospects post COVID-19, new research trends, and publication prospects to assist those who want to publish important and relevant studies in journals during this difficult period.

The webinar included:

Chris Cooper

Chris Cooper is professor in the School of Events, Tourism and Hospitality Management Leeds Beckett University in the United Kingdom. He gained his undergraduate degree and PhD in geography from University College London. Dr. Cooper has more than 40-years experience in tourism and has worked as a researcher and teacher in every region of the world. He gained experience in tour operation working for Thomson Travel before returning to academic life.

He is a member of the editorial board for leading tourism, hospitality and leisure journals and has authored a number of leading text and research books in tourism. He is the author of Essentials of Tourism, Third Edition and co-editor of The SAGE Handbook of Tourism Management.

Haiyan Song

Professor Haiyan Song is Mr. and Mrs. Chan Chak Fu Professor in International Tourism and Associate Dean in the School of Hotel and Tourism Management, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. His research focuses on tourism and hotel demand analysis, service recovery, tourist satisfaction, and wine economics. Over the years, professor Song has played significant roles in a number of international consultancy and collaborative projects, covering tourist satisfaction and service quality indices, Asia Pacific visitor forecasts, web-based tourism demand forecasting system, and development of the Guangdong tourist satellite account, which all have considerable impact on tourist destination management.

Chris Hardin is a corporate communications manager with SAGE Publishing.

View all posts by Chris Hardin

Related Articles

Boards and Internationalization Speed
Business and Management INK
November 18, 2024

Boards and Internationalization Speed

Read Now
How Managers Can Enhance Trust
Business and Management INK
November 11, 2024

How Managers Can Enhance Trust

Read Now
The Role of Place in Sustainability
Business and Management INK
October 28, 2024

The Role of Place in Sustainability

Read Now
Turning to Glitter in Management Studies – Why We Should Take ‘Unserious’ Glitter Serious to Understand New Management Practices
Business and Management INK
October 24, 2024

Turning to Glitter in Management Studies – Why We Should Take ‘Unserious’ Glitter Serious to Understand New Management Practices

Read Now
Utilizing Academic-Practitioner Partnering for Societal Impact

Utilizing Academic-Practitioner Partnering for Societal Impact

In this article, co-authors Natalie Slawinski, Bruna Brito, Jennifer Brenton, and Wendy Smith reflect on the inspiration behind their research article, “Reflections on deep academic–practitioner partnering for generative societal impact,” published in Strategic Organization.

Read Now
Trippin’ Forward: Management Research and the Development of Psychedelics

Trippin’ Forward: Management Research and the Development of Psychedelics

Charlie Smith reflects on his interest in psychedelic research, the topic of his research article, “Psychedelics, Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy and Employees’ Wellbeing,” published in Journal of Management Inquiry.

Read Now
Using Ethnography to Explore Entrepreneurial Extracurricular Activities

Using Ethnography to Explore Entrepreneurial Extracurricular Activities

Co-authors Birgitte Wraae and Nicolai Nybye reflect on the inspiration behind their research article, “Learning to Be “Me,” “the Team,” and “the Company” Through Entrepreneurial Extracurricular Activities: An Ethnographic Approach,” published in Entrepreneurship Education and Pedagogy.

Read Now
5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments