Description
Gen Z, Tourism, and Sustainable Consumption is the first book to provide a comprehensive account of Generation Z in relation to sustainable consumption practices and travel cultures.
Gen Z is regarded as the world’s largest consumer market. The growth and behaviour of this economically significant market will have enormous implications for the future development of the tourism industry and destinations and its long-term sustainability. Characterised as being the first generation to grow up with the Internet and sometimes even referred to as the i-Generation, Gen Z is broadly regarded as having an avid interest in travel but seeks to do so in a way that is socially and environmentally conscious, mobile connected, and grounded in authentic local experiences. Logically structured and featuring contributions from a plethora of experts on the topic, this volume provides a critical examination of Gen Z consumer and travel behaviour in a comparative international context and its implications for the tourism, hospitality, and events industries.
Embellished with illustrative figures and tables throughout, this book will be of pivotal interest not only to policy makers, destination management and marketing organisations (DMOs), and students of tourism, hospitality, sustainable consumption, and consumer culture, but also to those who seek to cater to this key market.
Table of Contents
PART I Introduction and context
1 Introduction: Gen Z, tourism, and sustainable consumption
SIAMAK SEYFI, C. MICHAEL HALL, AND MARIANNA STRZELECKA
2 Sustainable tourism for sustainable development: is Generation Z greener than Millennials?
FRANCISCO ROMERA AND EUGÉNIE LE BIGOT
PART II Gen Z travel experiences, behaviours, and patterns
3 Re-positioning Generation Z as drivers of sustainable development: co-designing tourism with local Gen Zs
EVA DUEDAHL, HOGNE ØIAN, MONICA ADELE BREIBY, BIRGITTA ERICSSON, AND MERETHE LERFALD
4 Are Generation Zers Homo vians, Phono sapiens, and Homo ecologicus? Intergenerational comparison with a reference to the Republic of Korea
JUNGHO SUH
5 Leading the sustainability change? Gen Z business students navigating amid global disruptions
MIIA GRÉNMAN, JUULIA RÄIKKÖNEN, OUTI UUSITALO, AND FANNY AAPIO
6 Motivations and spatiotemporal behaviour in an urban destination: a comparative analysis between backpackers from Generations Z and Y
MÁRCIO RIBEIRO MARTINS AND RUI AUGUSTO DA COSTA
7 The generational transition of Gen Z tourists’ behaviour: a sociological snapshot from the Vesuvius National Park
SALVATORE MONACO
PART III Generation Z consumption behaviour in the hospitality sector
8 Generation Z tourists’ perception of hotels’ green practices
LIONEL SAUL AND CINDY YOONJOUNG HEO
9 Green practices and Gen Zers’ behavioural intentions in the hospitality sector
GUADALUPE VILA-VAZQUEZ, SANDRA CASTRO-GONZÁLEZ, AND BELÉN BANDE VILELA
PART IV Gen Z and ethical consumption
10 Generation Z lifestyle: food activism and sustainable traveller behaviour
ALICIA OREA-GINER
11 Gen Z tourists’ perceptions of ethical consumption: a developing country perspective
ABOLFAZL SIYAMIYAN GORJI, SEYEDASAAD HOSSEINI, FERNANDO ALMEIDA GARCIA, AND RAFAEL CORTES MACIAS
12 Save it to cherish: the rise of wildlife voluntourism with Generation Z
MARIE-LOUISE BANK AND HELENA MARIA CORREIA NEVES CORDEIRO RODRIGUES
PART V Conclusions: Gen Z and the future of tourism
13 Conclusions and futures: are Gen Z the sustainable consumers of the future?
SIAMAK SEYFI, C. MICHAEL HALL, AND MARIANNA STRZELECKA