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Tourism

Library and Web resources

The following links are intended to be a starting point for finding resources relating to Cultural Tourism, as taught at Flinders University.

It includes:

Reference Material

Reference sources are useful in providing background information to a topic, as well as helping to clarify key concepts and words.

The following resources are located in the Reference Collection, on level 1 of the Central library (Please note, these books are not available for loan).

Year Book Australia: Chapters on Culture and Recreation and Tourism
also available online: Australia Now

319.405/Y3

Conservation and Environmentalism: an Encyclopedia 333.703/C755
Directory of Ecotourism Education 338.4791/E21
Aboriginal Tourism in Australia: a research bibliography 338.4791/Z57a
A dictionary of travel and tourism terminology 338.479103 B386d
Dictionary of Travel, Tourism and Hospitality terms 338.479103/H315d
Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia 994.003/E56

Books

The best way to find books on a topic is to do a search on Voyager (the library catalogue). Search either by keyword or subject heading.

Useful subject headings include:

Tourism
Travel
Ecotourism
Heritage tourism

Note that these subject headings can be further subdivided by country or region (eg. South Australia, Asia, etc), by type of material (handbooks, case studies, etc) or by more specific aspects (economic aspects, environmental aspects, etc).

Alternatively, browse the shelves at the following call numbers:

069 (museology)
338.4791 (tourism)
363.69 (cultural heritage)

A number of books and readings may have been placed on Reserve and/or eReserve. Use the Course Reserve Search on Voyager to search for your course.

Journals

A journal (also known as a periodical, serial or annual) is a publication that appears at regular intervals on an ongoing basis. Each issue has the same title and contains articles written by many different authors. Reading the journal literature is a good way to keep up-to-date in the field.

The library subscribes to a number of print and electronic journals; your lecturer will probably recommend titles that s/he thinks are particularly useful.

Library databases

The best way to find articles in journals is to use one of the many journal indexes available. These are available in electronic format and are commonly referred to as Library databases. There are two types of Library database: citation and full text.

Citation databases provide enough information to direct you to the full text of the article. They have sophisticated search capabilities, are subject-specific, and usually cover at least 30 years’ worth of literature. You will retrieve a citation (also known as a reference) for each item.

Full text databases will take you directly to the full text. While this is convenient, it is important to remember that there is a limited amount of material available in this format.

It is worth using a citation database that is subject-specific to ensure you obtain the maximum possible references, especially when looking for specialised information.

The following table summarises the most useful databases for cultural tourism-related research.

Resource Discipline Dates Coverage Access Help
APA-FT (via Informit) Social Sciences and Humanities; Australian Full text: 1995- ; Index: 1978-
Newspapers, scholarly journals, conference papers and books. 220+ comprehensively indexed journals
Connect!
Info
Expanded Academic ASAP Multi-disciplinary; US bias Full text; varies, from 1980- Scholarly and general interest journals.
3,500 indexed and full-text titles (2,100 are peer-reviewed)
Connect!
Info
JSTOR Multi-disciplinary Full text; archival
350+ scholarly journals
Connect!
Info
Leisuretourism Subject specific; US bias Citation; mid-70s - 400+ indexed titles
Connect!
Info
ProQuest Multi-disciplinary; US bias Full text; varies, from 1971- Newspapers, magazines and academic journals. 8000+ indexed titles
Connect!
Info

Websites

General Links

State Links

Australian Tourism Statistics


Maintained by:
Veronica Ghee
Humanities Liaison Librarian
Flinders University Library.