Alpine Pearls
Alpine Pearls is a cooperative established in 2006, consisting of 23 municipalities in five alpine countries. The tourism association claims to support and promote active mobility. The cooperation’s members fulfill strict quality criteria like town centers with reduced traffic, transfer services, environmentally friendly leisure time facilities, the guarantee of mobility without a car, and ecological minimum standards.
History
[edit]Alpine Pearls was established in 2006.[1] It is the result of two successive EU projects (Alps Mobility and Alps Mobility II – Alpine Pearls).[1] The cooperation emphasizes the importance of sustainable tourism, combining tourist attractions with environmentally friendly active mobility.[2][3][4] The association encourages tourists to visit less popular places. The scholar Sarah Seidel said this relieves the burden on the crowded, popular places and allows inhabitants of the less popular places to benefit from those tourists' money.[5]
Member municipalities
[edit]Germany
[edit]Italy
[edit]- Ceresole Reale[1]
- Cogne[1]
- Chamois - La Magdeleine[1]
- Forni di Sopra[1]
- Moena[1]
- Moos in Passeier[1]
- Mals
- Ratschings
- Villnöß[1]
- Limone Piemonte[1]
Austria
[edit]Switzerland
[edit]Slovenia
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Nadegger & Dobusch 2022, p. 166
- ^ Ilić, Milan (2023). "Ethical and Responsible Tourism". In Koščak, Marko; O'Rourke, Tony (eds.). Ethical and Responsible Tourism: Managing Sustainability in Local Tourism Destinations. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. p. 246. ISBN 978-1-00-335868-8. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
- ^ Heslinga, Jasper Hessel; Hillebrand, Hans; Emonts, Tanja (2019-04-09). "How to improve innovation in sustainable tourism? Five lessons learned from the Austrian Alps". Journal of Tourism Futures. 5 (1). Emerald Group Publishing: 35–42. doi:10.1108/JTF-09-2018-0054. ISSN 2055-5911.
- ^ Verbeek, D.H.P.; Bargeman, A.; Mommaas, J.T. (2011-11-22). "A sustainable tourism mobility passage". Tourism Review. 66 (4): 45–53. doi:10.1108/16605371111188731.
- ^ Seidel, Sarah (2018). "Distribution at the Destination: An underestimated force to improve hospitality services and enhance sustainable development". Sustainable Value Creation in Hospitality: Guests on Earth. Oxford: Goodfellow Publishers. p. 56. ISBN 978-1-911396-39-0. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
- ^ Wheatley, Paul (2011-02-06). "Green skiing in the Alps". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2024-03-26. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
Bibliography
[edit]- Nadegger, Monica; Dobusch, Leonhard (2022). "Meta-organisations as drivers for sustainability across tourism clusters in the Alps: A case study of 'Alpine Pearls'". In Lupova-Henry, Evgeniya; Dotti, Nicola Francesco (eds.). Clusters and Sustainable Regional Development: A Meta-Organisational Approach. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. pp. 160–175. doi:10.4324/9781003215066-14. ISBN 978-1-00-321506-6. Retrieved 2024-03-26 – via Google Books.