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What are the five pillars of tourism?

Based on the explanation in the background, the five key pillars of sustainable tourism development are tourism attraction, accessibility, amenity, ancillary, and community involvement.



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The five Ps (product, price, place, promotion and people) are the elements of the marketing mix.

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The four pillars include: Environmental Responsibility, Social Equity, Economic Health, and Cultural Vitality.

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The preservation and economic growth of regional communities and protected areas are fundamental tenets of sustainable tourism. Education, readiness, and knowledge. Improving the tourist's attitude toward the environment. Minimizing the damage through better awareness and consideration of the impact he creates.

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The ILO's definition of sustainable tourism is, that it is “composed of three pillars: social justice, economic development, and environmental integrity.

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There are six major components of tourism, each with their own sub-components. These are: tourist boards, travel services, accommodation services, conferences and events, attractions and tourism services.

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The Big Five was traditionally used as a hunting term to describe the five most dangerous animals in Africa to hunt. Their reputation has spilled over into the tourism industry and now elephant, buffalo, lion, leopard and rhino remain the most sought after species to see on the continent.

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(Product, price, place, promotion, people, process, physical evidence) have been considered to be the independent variables.

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A basic rule of tourism and travel is: to treat your customer fairly, and provided a good product in a safe and clean environment. Travelers understand that the tourism industry must show a profit if it is to survive. Making a profit however does not mean overcharging or underserving.

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It can put enormous pressure on an area and lead to impacts such as soil erosion, increased pollution, discharges into the sea, natural habitat loss, increased pressure on endangered species and heightened vulnerability to forest fires.

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The 12 aims of sustainability in tourism have been defined by the UNWTO as: economic viability, local prosperity, employment quality, social equity, visitor fulfillment, local control, community wellbeing, cultural richness, physical integrity, biological diversity, resource efficiency, and environmental purity.

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