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Learning to ride the waves: Whale-watching tour operators in British Columbia and their perspectives on COVID-19 impacts
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Description / Synopsis |
Description / Synopsis
The COVID-19 era and related restrictions have impacted British Columbia (BC) whalewatching operators and their perspectives on whale-watching and tourism-government relations in BC. Despite the popularity and importance of whale-watching in BC, and its relative freedom from restrictions given its outdoor operations, tour operators had to negotiate dynamic constraints during the COVID-19 era. Federal and provincial government responses to the pandemic directly impacted whale-watching, for example, by changing the capacity or number of tourists allowed per vessel. Restrictions also impacted additional goods and services offered by some tour operators, such as refreshments. Adapting to such changes required a certain agility on the part of operators. Many operators also accessed key government supports such as loans and wage subsidies. This paper is based on a mixed methods research project centered on qualitative interview-based research and analysis. It was also informed by limited participant observation on whale-watching tours. Here, we present data gleaned from virtual interviews with 10 whale-watching tour operators. These operators represent approximately 1/4 of 39 active existing operators on and around Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. We offer participant responses and greater response patterns with respect to: 1) how COVID-19 impacted whale-watching operations in BC, 2) what, if any, pivots or changes operators made in response, 3) which supports they accessed and their evaluations of them, and 4) their perspectives on the future of BC whalewatching. We begin with an introduction to: whale-watching in BC; COVID-19’s impacts on tourism as well as government responses to these; key concepts such as the Tourist Area Life Cycle, and ideas about how tourism weathers crises. We then present results highlighting key barriers, opportunities, and adaptations experienced by the tour operators, emphasizing their own words. We end by considering longer term implications for whale-watching in BC. This paper was written for both academic and applied audiences. |
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Author (aut): Abdel-Malak, Amy
Thesis advisor (ths): Meletis, Zoë A.
Degree committee member (dgc): Wigglesworth, Jennifer
Degree committee member (dgc): Moghimehfar, Farhad
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https://doi.org/10.24124/2022/59351
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Degree granting institution (dgg): University of Northern British Columbia
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1 online resource (iii, 53 pages)
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PUBLISHED
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unbc_59351.pdf12.17 MB
28286-Extracted Text.txt98.97 KB
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English
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Learning to ride the waves: Whale-watching tour operators in British Columbia and their perspectives on COVID-19 impacts
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12757791
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