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<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>1646-2408</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Revista Encontros Científicos - Tourism & Management Studies]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Encontros Científicos]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>1646-2408</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Escola Superior de Gestão, Hotelaria e Turismo]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S1646-24082010000100002</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Tourism development trajectories- From culture to creativity?]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Trajectórias do desenvolvimento turístico - da cultura à criatividade?]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Richards]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Greg]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
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<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Tilburg University  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
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<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>00</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<numero>6</numero>
<fpage>9</fpage>
<lpage>15</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S1646-24082010000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S1646-24082010000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S1646-24082010000100002&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This paper traces the development of creative tourism as new form of cultural tourism. This trend has been stimulated by the growth of new consumption patterns, by more involved and skilled forms of tourism activity, and by changes in the production of tourism, such as the development of the experience economy. Arguably creative tourism also provides some answers to the increasing problems experienced in cultural tourism development, which is rapidly becoming another form of mass tourism. The paper outlines the different forms that creative tourism can take, ranging from interactive workshops and learning experiences to creative backdrops for tourism activity. Illustrations of creative tourism forms are taken from creative tourism networks, workshops, creative spaces, cultural itineraries and creative events.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[Este artigo traça o desenvolvimento do turismo criativo como uma nova forma de turismo cultural. Esta tendência foi estimulada pelo crescimento de novos padrões de consumo, por formas mais envolventes e especializadas da actividade turística e por alterações na produção do turismo, tais como a economia de experiências. O turismo criativo também dá algumas respostas aos crescentes problemas sentidos no desenvolvimento do turismo cultural, que se está transformando rapidamente numa nova forma de turismo de massas. Este artigo descreve nas suas linhas gerais as diferentes formas que o turismo criativo pode assumir, desde workshops interactivos e experiências que envolvem uma componente de aprendizagem até cenários criativos para a actividade turística. Exemplos de formas de turismo criativas são dados a partir de redes de turismo criativo, workshops, espaços criativos, itinerários culturais e eventos criativos.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Creative tourism]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[creativity]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[cultural tourism]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[cultural events]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Turismo criativo]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[criatividade]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[turismo cultural]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[eventos culturais]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[ <p><b>Tourism development trajectories- From culture to creativity?</b></P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>Greg Richards</b></P>     <p>Professor of Leisure Studies at Tilburg University, Director of the ATLAS Cultural    Tourism Project Tilburg University, The Netherlands, <a href="mailto:g.w.richards@uvt.nl">g.w.richards@uvt.nl</a></P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p>ABSTRACT</P>     <p>This paper traces the development of  creative tourism as new form of cultural tourism. This trend has been stimulated  by the growth of new consumption patterns, by more involved and skilled forms of  tourism activity, and by changes in the production of tourism, such as the  development of the experience economy. Arguably creative tourism also provides  some answers to the increasing problems experienced in cultural tourism  development, which is rapidly becoming another form of mass tourism. The paper  outlines the different forms that creative tourism can take, ranging from  interactive workshops and learning experiences to creative backdrops for tourism  activity. Illustrations of creative tourism forms are taken from creative  tourism networks, workshops, creative spaces, cultural itineraries and creative  events.</P>     <p><b>Keywords</b>: Creative tourism, creativity, cultural tourism, cultural events.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>Trajectórias do desenvolvimento turístico – da cultura à criatividade?</b></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>RESUMO</P>     <p>Este artigo traça o desenvolvimento do turismo criativo como uma nova forma    de turismo cultural. Esta tendência foi estimulada pelo crescimento de novos    padrões de consumo, por formas mais envolventes e especializadas da actividade    turística e por alterações na produção do turismo, tais como a economia de experiências.    O turismo criativo também dá algumas respostas aos crescentes problemas sentidos    no desenvolvimento do turismo cultural, que se está transformando rapidamente    numa nova forma de turismo de massas. Este artigo descreve nas suas linhas gerais    as diferentes formas que o turismo criativo pode assumir, desde workshops interactivos    e experiências que envolvem uma componente de aprendizagem até cenários criativos    para a actividade turística. Exemplos de formas de turismo criativas são dados    a partir de redes de turismo criativo, workshops, espaços criativos, itinerários    culturais e eventos criativos.&nbsp; </P>     <p><b>Palavras-Chave</b>: Turismo criativo, criatividade, turismo cultural, eventos    culturais.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>1. Introduction</b></P>     <p>Culture and tourism were two of the major  growth industries of the 20<SUP>th</SUP> century, and towards the end of the  century the combination of these two sectors into 'cultural tourism' had become  one of the most desirable development options for countries and regions around  the world. </P>     <p>As the recent OECD report on The Impact of  Culture on Tourism (2009) noted, cultural tourism accounted for almost 360  million international tourism trips in 2007, or 40% of global tourism. In value  terms, the contribution of cultural tourism is even greater, since cultural  tourists are estimated to spend as much as one third more on average than other  tourists (Richards  2007).</P>     <p>However, the rapid growth of cultural  tourism from the preserve of the elite Grand Tourists to a major industry in the  20<SUP>th</SUP> Century has also caused problems. Growing numbers of tourists at  major sites and in small communities has raised questions about the  sustainability of this new form of mass tourism. In particular it has become  harder for destinations to profile their culture among the welter of products on  offer, each desperate to claim their uniqueness. There are a growing number of  places in search of new forms of articulation between culture and tourism which  can help to strengthen rather than water down local culture, which can raise the  value accruing to local communities and improve the links between local  creativity and tourism.</P>     <p>Many places are therefore turning to  creative development strategies, or different forms of creative tourism in the  process. This paper examines why and how cultural tourism is being transformed  into creative tourism.</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>2. The growth of cultural tourism</b></P>     <p>In order to understand the origins of  creative tourism, we first have t look at th4 rise of culture as a form of  tourism consumption. In the past, culture was not something strongly associated  with tourism, which was viewed mainly as a leisure activity. In Europe, only  small numbers of relatively wealthy people used to undertake cultural tours with  specific educational goals – the vast majority saw holidays as time for rest and  relaxation. This situation gradually changed during the 20<SUP>th</SUP> Century,  as tourists became more experienced and started seeking new experiences on  holiday and more places began to recognise the value of culture as a potential  means of generating tourism. </P>     <p>A number of vectors of cultural, social and  economic change underlay the growth of cultural tourism. These included a  fundamental shift in the nature of consumption, changing factors of production  and changes in the nature of tourism itself.</P>     <p><I>The trajectory of consumption – from  basic needs to creative needs</I></P>     <p>As society has developed, so the basis of  human needs and wants has also changed. As we became increasingly able to  satisfy our basic needs for food and shelter, we turned our attention to the  satisfaction of 'higher order' needs, such as status and self-fulfilment.  Scitovsky (1976) has described this development in terms of the shift from  unskilled to skilled consumption, or from outer-directed to inner-directed  consumption. People are no longer just concerned t accumulate goods, but they  also want to develop themselves and their own consumption skills. People want to  paint, drawn, design, photograph, sing, do yoga – a whole range of activities  which will build their own skills and develop their potential. </P>     <p>Ironically this growing desire for  creativity coincides with a diminishing amount of available time in which to be  creative. One route is to be creative in interstitial time at home, via the  Internet, another is through travel, as holidays often provide the only  significant block of free time that pressured creative class has. They are also  demanding more ‘real’ experiences of everyday life. </P>     <p><I>The trajectory of production – from  goods to experiences</I></P>     <p>At the same time, the nature of production  has shifted dramatically. Pine and Gilmore (1999) have shown that the previous  stages of the economy based on the production of goods or services have been  replaced by the an economy specialised in the production of experiences.  Increasing competition forces producers to differentiate their products by  adding value, such as additional features or services. However, over time,  competitors can reproduce these features and the value of the product, and  therefore productivity, declines.&nbsp; In the experience economy the product is  a unique experience for the consumer, which cannot be replicated so easily.  </P>     <p><I>The trajectory of tourism – from mass  tourism to cultural tourism to creative tourism?</I></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Tourism as an industry has also undergone  major transformations in line with the rise of skilled consumption and the  experience economy. Tourism is of course one of the phenomena closely identified  with the rise of the service industry, and in many countries it is the most  important single service industry. Tourism grew rapidly in the latter half of  the 20<SUP>th</SUP> century because the basic inputs were cheap and easy to  mass-produce. The rise of mass tourism also brought about several negative  impacts, such as overcrowding, environmental problems, degradation of local  culture, etc. Cultural tourism, in contrast, was often viewed as a 'good' form  of tourism, which was small-scale, high-spend and low impact. Perhaps most  importantly, cultural tourists themselves were perceived as desirable visitors,  because they were usually wealthy, well-heeled and well-behaved. </P>     <p>In the past, cultural tourism was also  largely based on cultural heritage – particularly those elements of heritage,  such as museums and monuments, which can be consumed by large numbers of people.  In Europe, for example, Europa Nostra has estimated that 50% of European tourism  is related to such resources, and the ATLAS research programme has shown that  over 50% of cultural tourists visit museums and monuments. </P>     <p>The convergence of these different  trajectories of change in consumption, production and tourism style served to  create a cultural tourism boom from the 1980s onwards. The ATLAS research has  underlined how cultural visits have tended to grow as a proportion of tourism  consumption, reaching 36% of those surveyed in 2008. This growth, coupled with  the perception of cultural tourism as high value tourism, encouraged many  countries and regions to develop specific cultural tourism programmes, and to  design marketing efforts targeted at cultural tourists. </P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>3. Cultural tourism: A victim of its own success?</b></P>     <p>There is no doubt that tourism and culture  are now inextricably linked, and that cultural tourism is a major segment of  global tourism. However, there are also signs that  cultural tourism is now becoming a victim of its own success. The work of Paolo  Russo (2002) in Venice has underlined how historic city centres can suffer from  a 'vicious cycle' of cultural tourism development, in which famous sites attract  large numbers of tourists, degrading the quality of experience and driving  'serious' cultural tourists away The falling appeal of the destination forces  suppliers to concentrate on new, lower value markets, chiefly consisting of  excursionists. </P>     <p>Other problems are also evident. There is a  certain irony in destinations seeking to develop their uniqueness through  cultural tourism. In fact, many places follow similar strategies in order to  achieve their uniqueness, which ends up making those places feel and look the  same. This is the problem of 'serial reproduction' is clearly evident in the  development of many products related to cultural tourism, which include elements  such as:</P>     <p>Iconic structures (e.g.Bilbao Guggenheim)</P>     <p>Megaevents (e.g. European Capital of  Culture)</P>     <p>Thematization (e.g. Cultural  routes)</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Heritage mining (e.g. historic  quarters)</P>     <p>These strategies are recognisable in cities across the globe, and the means    of consuming these products are also becoming increasingly familiar: the tourist    bus, the city card, the guided tour. </P>     <p>The major problem with this process of  'McCulturization' to paraphrase Ritzer (1993), is that the very people targeted  by these products are repelled by them. Just as cultural tourists are becoming  more experienced, more sophisticated and better able to structure their own  tourism experiences, so the cultural tourism product being offered is becoming  more standardized, more ridged and less engaging. &nbsp;One cultural creative describes their dissatisfaction with  (post)modern existence thus: ‘I was accumulating experiences without changing  very much’.</P>     <p>The ATLAS research has indicated that the  experiences enjoyed most by cultural tourists tend to be those small-scale, less  visited places that offer a taste of 'local' or 'authentic' culture. Tourists  increasingly say that they want to experience local culture, to live like locals  and to find out about the real identity of the places they visit. Clearly new  types of cultural tourism products are needed. </P>     <p>The emergence of this new breed of cultural  tourist coincides with the growth in 'prosumption' – the process by which the  consumer becomes a producer of the products and experiences they consume. We are  already used to doing a large element of the work i producing services, as  Ritzer demonstrated in the case of fast food and Disney-style entertainment, but  as people demand more individualised and engaging experiences, so the level of  consumer involvement is increasing.</P>     <p>The skilled consumer often knows more about  the experiences they are consuming than the people who are supposed to supply  them. Not surprisingly, therefore, skilled consumers have begun to take the lead  in experience production. Lifestyle entrepreneurs start lifestyle businesses,  travellers construct their own itineraries on the Internet, compiling flights  and hostel beds and combining these with couches borrowed from friends on social  networking sites. These travellers no longer buy the packaged excursion, but  creatively shape their own experiences, based on what they want to see, when  they want to see it when they want to see it, These experiences usually  emphasise active involvement in local culture, rather than the highlights of  global culture.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>4. From cultural to creative tourism</b></P>     <p>Faced with these changes in the nature of  experience production and consumption, destinations could continue offering the  same mass cultural tourism products they always have, but they do this at the  risk of losing a very important part of the market. Admittedly, these new forms  of tourism are difficult for the traditional tourism sector to deal with, but  there are major opportunities in working with rather than ignoring creative  tourism.</P>     <p>Richards (2000:  18) have defined creative tourism as: «Tourism which offers visitors the  opportunity to develop their creative potential through active participation in  courses and learning experiences which are characteristic of the holiday  destination where they are undertaken».</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>This definition has a number of important  implications:</P>     <p><B>Creative potential</B></P>     <p>The tourist is provided with the tools to  develop their own creative potential, and to take something more than souvenirs  home with them.</P>     <p><B>Active involvement</B></P>     <p>The consumer is actively involved in the  creative process, and this involvement creates the potential for genuine  exchange and engagement with local people and local culture.</P>     <p><B>Characteristic  experiences</B></P>     <p>Creativity can happen anywhere, but the  important thing is to link the creative process to the destination and to anchor  it in local culture, creativity and identity. This requires not just creativity  on the part of the tourist, but also the destination.</P>     <p><B>Co-creation</B></P>     <p>The concept of creative tourism implies a  level of co-creation, or co-makership between visitors and locals. Co-creation  covers an emerging body of knowledge about the way in which products, services  and experiences are made jointly by producers and consumers. At its most crude,  this concept involves using the consumer's knowledge of the product in order to  improve it and to provide a closer fits with consumer needs. However, in the  context of creative tourism there is usually a much more important dimension of  co-creation at work, which involves a reversal of the normal power relationships  attached to tourism. This is most evident in projects such as the Opuwo workshop  in Namibia, where the Finnish designer Satu Miettinen (2008) has run craft  workshops for tourists. These workshops are led by local women, who rather than  serving tourists in bars or restaurants, or selling them trinkets in the market,  now become their teachers and co-workers, guiding them in the skills required to  make traditional objects and initiating them into their cultural significance.  </P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b>5. Examples of creative tourism experiences</b></P>     <p>Our research on the relationship between  tourism and creativity suggest that there are a number of ways in which they can  be linked in order to enhance the tourism product and the visitor  experience.</P>     <p><I>Types of creative tourism  experiences</I></P>     <p><I>Experience</I>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;    <I>Delivery</I></P>     <p>Learning&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  Workshops</P>     <p>Tasting&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  Experiences</P>     <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  Open ateliers</P>     <p>Seeing&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  Itineraries</P>     <p>Buying&nbsp;  <I>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  </I>Shop window</P>     <p>These types of experiences can be delivered in a variety of ways, including    the creation of networks, itineraries, courses and events. The summary below    provides some examples. Many more examples can be found in Richards (2006; 2007).</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><B><U>Creative tourism networks</U></B></P>     <p>The most developed creative tourism network can be found in the city of Nelson,    New Zealand, where Creative Tourism New Zealand has been established as a network    of creative businesses offering products to tourists (<a href="http://www.creativetourism.co.nz" target="_blank">www.creativetourism.co.nz</a>).    The network provides a wide range of creative experiences, including bone carving,    Maori language classes, weaving, felting and woodwork and New Zealand gastronomy.    The focus is very much on learning experiences, with a range of hands-on workshops    being run by local tutors (Raymond 2007). </P>     <p>Creative Tourism Barcelona (<A  href="http://www.barcelonacreativa.info/" target="_blank">www.barcelonacreativa.info</A>)  takes a slightly different approach, acting as an intermediary to link creative  producers in the city with people from other parts of the world who want to  engage in creative activities there. This more artistic approach to the  development of creative tourism provides a platform through which potential  creative tourists can indicate the types of creative activities they are  interested in, and they are then put in touch with local creative sector actors  who can provide the facilities or resources to make it happen. More recently,  Creative Tourism Barcelona has also been developing more specific creative  activities with creative producers which can be offered to groups of 'creative  tourists' on demand.</P>     <p><B><U>Creative Spaces</U></B></P>     <p>Particular spaces have also been developed  to offer creative learning experiences to visitors in different parts of the  world. For example the Italian coffee producer illy’s Università del Caffè  provides courses on all aspects of coffee and coffee making at 11 different  locations (<A  href="http://www.illy.com/wps/wcm/connect/us/illy/the-world-of-coffee/universita-del-caffe/" target="_blank">http://www.illy.com/wps/wcm/connect/us/illy/the-world-of-coffee/universita-del-caffe/</A>).  Since 1999, approximately 22,000 students have graduated from this  institution.&nbsp; The Valrhona chocolate company provides similar courses for  gourmets and professionals in their L’Ecole du Grand Chocolat in Southern  France. </P>     <p>In Barcelona different forms of accommodation have tapped into the creative    sector to develop new experiences. The Chic and Basic hotel has staged fashion    shows, using its individually-designed bedrooms to showcase the products of    young local designers. The Equity Point hostels group (<A  href="http://www.equity-point.com/" target="_blank">http://www.equity-point.com/hostelart/index_es.html</A>)    runs a ‘hostelArt’ programme, giving young artists an opportunity to exhibit    their work in hostel rooms and introducing young travellers to the creative    sector in Barcelona. The Camping House Barcelona (<A  href="http://www.barcelona-house.com/CHcast/arquitectostxtC.html" target="_blank">http://www.barcelona-house.com/CHcast/arquitectostxtC.html</A>)    is a new concept in tourist accommodation, providing guests with the sensation    of camping in the middle of the city, and adding design value to their stay.  </P>     <p><B><U>Events</U></B></P>     <p>Cities around the globe are busy developing  their 'eventfulness' (Palmer and Richards, forthcoming) in  order to utilise the creative power of events to help the city achieve its wider  cultural social and economic goals. Many of the new types of events being  developed are not just about passive audience attendance, but the active  involvement of creative producers and others in the 'co-creation' of events.  </P>     <p>In the Swedish city of Umea, for example,  the bid to stage the European Capital of Culture in 2014 is being run on an open  source principle. Instead of the programme being designed by 'experts' in the  cultural sector the event is being planned and programmed with direct  involvement of local people.&nbsp;&nbsp; For example, local schoolchildren  created a blog which was used as the basic script for an opera performance to  which they were later invited. By extending this open source or co-creation  concept to the national and international arena, this also becomes a strategy to  develop creative tourism. The audience is not there simply to consume, but also  to take an active part in producing the experience.</P>     <p>The Festes de Gràcia is a local festival in a district of Barcelona which has    developed into a major celebration for the whole city. The key element of this    event is the decoration of local streets by residents, using recycled materials.    Each street is themed, and there I a high level of creativity involved in creating    a totally new space from discarded items such as water bottles and milk cartons.  </P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><B><U>Cultural Itineraries</U></B></P>     <p>Cultural itineraries can also be a means of  linking together creative enterprises and events, stimulating visitors to see a  number of different activities in a specific region. The Craft Route of the Alto  Minho in Northern Portugal includes a large number of crafts producers, most of  whom work from home. The brochure and website given tourists the possibility of  visiting these producers, but the lack of any form of contact apart from  telephone makes it difficult for non-Portuguese speakers. As a practical  solution to the problem of dealing with foreign tourists, the tourist board has  now begun to sell craft products in its information centres. Sales are supported  by demonstrations from crafts producers during the high season. </P>     <p>The results of this initiative have been  positive, with a rapid increase in craft sales. Producers said they were happy  with the increased sales and with the extra marketing efforts by the tourist  board. The main problem was that the project-based funding finished after three  years, leading to a lower level of marketing activity and lower sales.  </P>     <p>As a new approach to the cultural itinerary  concept, the Council of Europe is developing a ‘Cultural Corridor’ scheme,  initially in South East Europe. The Council of Europe defines Cultural Corridors  as: </P>     <p>Networks of interaction and economic  exchange based on culture and creativity, incorporating principles of  sustainability, fairness and inclusion, based on wide stakeholder partnerships  which are rooted in solid institutional frameworks that stimulate regional  socio-economic development.</P>     <p>The basic idea is to create networks which  move beyond physical routes linking cultural sites to include the full range of  creative assets in a region (Richards, Russo and Grossman  2008).&nbsp; </P>     <p><B><U>Creative backdrops</U></B></P>     <p>Many cities have a reputation of being  ‘creative’ in one way or another, just as Santa Fe does. In many cases this  creativity is experienced by the visitor not so much in the direct consumption  of creative activities, but rather through the general atmosphere or buzz of the  place as a whole, which is generated by the creative sector. This strategy is  currently being employed in Shanghai and Beijing, as newly developing creative  clusters are opened up and marketed to tourists. </P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>6. Developing creative tourism in the future</b></P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Many of the creative tourism initiatives  currently operating are still at en early stage in their development. However,  we can already identify many key success factors which are likely to continue to  be important in the future. Most importantly, creative tourism must be developed  to link local creativity with creative people who travel. This can provide an  antidote to the serial reproduction of culture and what Lee has termed  ‘Find and Replace’ Economic Development. Instead, the  combined creativity of local people and visitors can be harnessed to maximise  the distinctiveness of places.</P>     <p>In order to achieve this, creative tourism development needs to be based on    a number of key principles:</P>     <p>Know who you are and where you  are</P>     <p>Distinctiveness is about those factors that  make places stand out from the others. This is not just about the tangible  assets that places have, but also about their intangible resources, including  atmosphere, ambiance, skills and creativity. </P>     <p>Use local capacity</P>     <p>Creative tourism is based on those aspects  of creativity that are characteristic of the place visited. Importing ideas or  skills is often counter-productive to the development of creative tourism  (although the knowledge of how to implement creative tourism may have to be  'borrowed' from elsewhere).</P>     <p>Build on what you have</P>     <p>There is no need to engage in major  construction of new facilities – the trick is to use those you have more  creatively. A refitted cave, a renovated factory or an ice hotel would usually  be more interesting than a new five star hotel.</P>     <p>Develop quality not gimmicks</P>     <p>Although creativity often depends on  spontaneity, risk and surprise, it is not a question of using gimmicks or  following fashionable trends. For creative tourism it is more important to deal  with quality and authenticity, or re-interpreting or innovating tradition.  </P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Use creative resources as a catalyst</P>     <p>Whereas the basic strategy of cultural  tourism depends on the reproduction of culture into fairly static products for  tourists, creative tourism should be viewed as a process which can stimulate  further change. The use of local crafts as a basis for creative tourism  experiences should provide a means of innovating the production of souvenirs.  </P>     <p>All of these basic principles can help  destinations to rethink and refit cultural tourism in interesting and innovative  ways. in doing so, places can not only increase their potential to attract  creative tourists, but can also increase their general creative potential,  helping to address broader cultural, social and economic problems. At a very  basic level, for example, the recognition of minority cultures as a source of  creativity and skills rather than tradition or cultural objects immediately  places these groups in a new position vis a vis the mainstream economy, the  tourism industry, the tourists and society as a whole. Individuals who possess  unique creative skills are placed in a new position of power as the purveyors of  knowledge and the teachers of skills. The tourist is also transformed from an  insensitive individual who is ignorant about local culture into a pupil and a  colleague who is there to receive and exchange knowledge with their hosts. Such  proactive forms of creative tourism are unlikely to grow into the kind of mass  tourism experiences currently seen in many cultural tourism destinations.  </P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>7. Conclusion</b></P>     <p>Creative experiences are an increasingly  important part of the tourism landscape, and creative tourism development  strategies are now being adopted in many destinations around the world. Creative  tourism can potentially address some of the pitfalls of contemporary cultural  tourism models and can help to make places more distinctive and engaging for  residents and visitors alike. However, the development of creative tourism is  still at a fairly early stage, and there is much research needed to identify  best practice and critical success factors. In the future it is likely that  different models of creative tourism development will emerge, guided by the  characteristics of the destination and the co-creation activities of tourism  producers and consumers.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p><b>References</b></P>     <p>ATLAS (2009): <I>ATLAS Cultural Tourism Research Project</I>, <a href="http://www.tram-research.com/atlas" target="_blank">www.tram-research.com/atlas</a>.  </P>     <p>OECD  (2009): <I>The Impact of Culture on Tourism</I>, OECD, Paris. </P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>MIETTINEN,  S. (2008): “Creative tourism as tool for local empowerment”, in: <I>Changing  experiences. The development of creative tourism</I>, ATLAS, Arnhem.</P>     <p>PINE,  B.J. and GILMORE, J.H. (1999): <I>The Experience Economy</I>, Harvard University  Press, Boston.</P>     <p>RAYMOND,  C. (2007): “Creative Tourism New Zealand: The practical challenges of developing  creative tourism”, in <I>Tourism, Creativity and Development</I>., Routledge,  London, pp. 145-157.</P>     <p>RICHARDS,  G. (2007, ed.): <I>Cultural Tourism: Global and local perspectives</I>, Haworth  Press, New York. </P>     <p>RICHARDS,  G. and RAYMOND, C. (2000): “Creative Tourism”, <I>ATLAS News</I>, no. 23, 16-20.  </P>     <p>RICHARDS,  G., RUSSO, A.P. and GROSSMAN, M. (2008): <I>Cultural Corridors in South East  Europe: Refinement of concept and development of pilot projects</I>, Council of  Europe, Strasbourg. </P>     <!-- ref --><p>RICHARDS,  G. and WILSON, J. (2006): “Developing Creativity in Tourist Experiences: A  Solution to the Serial Reproduction of Culture?”, <I>Tourism Management</I> 27,  1209-1223. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000119&pid=S1646-2408201000010000200001&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><p>RICHARDS  G. and WILSON, J. (2007): <I>Tourism, Creativity and Development</I>, Routledge,  London. </P>     <p>RITZER,  G. (1993): <I>The McDonaldization of Society</I>, Pine Forge Press.</P>     <p>RUSSO,  A.P. (2002): “The ‘vicious circle’ of tourism development in heritage cities”,  <I>Annals of Tourism Research</I> Volume 29, Issue 1, January 2002, Pages  165-182</P>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>SCITOVSKY,  T. (1976): <I>The Joyless Economy</I>, Oxford University Press,  Oxford.</P>     <p>&nbsp;</P>     <p>Submitted:  12.08.2010</P>     <p>Accepted:  15. 10.2010</P>      ]]></body><back>
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