高清不卡福利

This website uses cookies to understand how you use the website and to improve your experience. By continuing to use the website, you accept the 高清不卡福利 of New England鈥檚 use of cookies and similar technologies. To learn more about our use of cookies and how to manage your browser cookie settings, please review our Privacy Notice.

'Australian Broadcasting Corporation' interviews UNE historian Eric Zuelow on growing anti-tourism sentiment in Europe

Eric Zuelow
Eric Zuelow

On August 12, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation aired a radio interview with Eric Zuelow, Ph.D., associate professor of European history in the Department of History and Philosophy. Zuelow, the author of A History of Modern Tourism, discussed the growing backlash against tourists in several European travel destinations.

As acts of terrorism have dissuaded people from visiting countries such as Turkey and Egypt, European cities, such as Barcelona, Venice and Rome, contended with an influx of tourism this past summer that, in many cases, brought discontent to locals. Protests against tourists have become a growing problem in Europe, as evidenced by the July attack on a sightseeing bus in Spain.

According to Zuelow, multinational organizations worked very hard after World War II to build tourism. He said, 鈥淭ourism was a way to build the economy. It was a way to prevent the spread of communism,鈥 and, ironically, 鈥渋t was a way to promote world peace.鈥

To learn more about the College of Arts and Sciences, visit www.une.edu/cas

 

To apply, visit www.une.edu/admissions