Reimagining Tourism Education for a Sustainable and Regenerative Future

dc.contributor
Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS
dc.contributor.author
Ramírez García, Itziar
dc.contributor.author
Teixidó-Navarro, Francesc
dc.contributor.author
Moukalled, Lara
dc.contributor.author
Freund, Daniela
dc.contributor.author
Fornells Herrera, Albert
dc.contributor.author
Hernandez-Maskivker, Gilda
dc.contributor.author
Derqui, Belén
dc.contributor.author
Pliatsika, Fenia
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Kanteler, Despoina
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TOPALOGLOU, Lefteris
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Cerjak, Marija
dc.contributor.author
Hadelan, Lari
dc.contributor.author
Mesic, Zeljka
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Zrakić Sušac, Magdalena
dc.contributor.author
Subaşı kaplan, Hatice
dc.date.accessioned
2026-01-10T12:41:35Z
dc.date.issued
2026-06-05
dc.identifier.isbn
9781041160335
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14342/5752
dc.description.abstract
This chapter reports findings from ERASMUS+ EcoHarmony (Ecoharmony project, 2024), a multinational initiative co-funded by the European Union that advances a comprehensive strategy to embed sustainable—and explicitly regenerative tourism within European higher education. Using a sequential mixed-methods design (nine focus groups across Spain, Croatia, Turkey, Italy, Greece, and the Netherlands; n = 70; followed by a cross-European survey; n = 198), the chapter examines: (1) the extent of sustainability and regenerative integration in curricula; (2) pedagogical, institutional, and technological barriers and enablers; and (3) scalable strategies to align programmes with 21st-century demands. Guided by systems thinking, transformative learning, and a regenerative tourism lens (toward regenerative justice), and attentive to digital transformation (AI/VR/blockchain), the analysis finds progress but fragmentation: roughly 75% of institutions offer sustainability content, yet holistic, cross-curricular embedding is rare; familiarity with regeneration remains limited (≈20–25%). Barriers include legacy programme architectures, constrained faculty development, weak institutional support, and misaligned assessment practices. Enablers include rising student demand, motivated educators, and NGO–industry–government partnerships. The chapter proposes a practical roadmap, intentional interdisciplinarity, assessment reform (systems/ethics/collaboration), quality-assured micro-credentials, and hybrid experiential learning that blends digital simulations with fieldwork and internships, to shift institutions from incremental improvements to systemic transformation.
dc.format.extent
20 p.
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
dc.relation.ispartof
Social Responsibility in Hospitality and Tourism Bridging Education and Practice Transitions. Bridging Education and Practice Transitions
dc.rights
© L'autor/a
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.subject
Turisme--Aspectes ambientals
dc.subject
Ensenyament universitari
dc.subject
Education, Higher
dc.subject
Tourist trade-- Environmental aspects
dc.title
Reimagining Tourism Education for a Sustainable and Regenerative Future
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
dc.subject.udc
338
dc.subject.udc
378
dc.description.version
info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
dc.embargo.terms
forever
dc.date.embargoEnd
9999-01-01
dc.rights.accessLevel
info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess


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