2025
外刊吃瓜
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本周JCS外刊吃瓜
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社會學(xué)·國際頂刊
Annals of Tourism Research
(《旅游研究年鑒》)
最新一期的目錄與摘要
讓我們一起來看看吧~
About ATR
期刊簡介
Annals of Tourism Research is a social sciences journal focusing upon academic perspectives on tourism. For the purposes of determining areas of interest, tourism is defined as a global economic activity comprising travel behaviour, the management and marketing activities of service industries that arise to meet consumer demand, the effects of tourism activities on communities and policy and governance at local, national and international levels. While striving for a balance of theory and application, Annals is ultimately dedicated to developing theoretical constructs that span business and the social and behavioural sciences. Disciplinary areas include, but are not limited to: service industries management, marketing science, consumer marketing, decision-making and behaviour, business ethics, economics and forecasting, environment, geography and development, education and knowledge development, political science and administration, consumer-focused psychology, and anthropology and sociology. Its strategies are to invite and encourage offerings from various disciplines; to serve as a forum through which these may interact; and thus to expand frontiers of knowledge in and contribute to the literature on tourism social science from a multidisciplinary perspective.
期刊影響力
CiteScore(引用分):數(shù)值為 16.2 。CiteScore是 Elsevier (愛思唯爾)基于 Scopus 數(shù)據(jù)庫計算的指標(biāo),能夠衡量期刊平均每篇文章在一定時間內(nèi)被引用的次數(shù),從而反映期刊整體影響力和文章被關(guān)注程度。
Impact Factor(影響因子):數(shù)值為 7.8 。IF由 Clarivate Analytics(科睿唯安)基于 Web of Science 數(shù)據(jù)庫計算,計算方式為某期刊前兩年發(fā)表論文在統(tǒng)計年被引用總次數(shù)除以該期刊前兩年發(fā)表論文總數(shù)。IF是國際上常用評判期刊學(xué)術(shù)水平的指標(biāo)之一 ,體現(xiàn)期刊近期論文被引用的頻率和學(xué)術(shù)影響力 。
Current Issue
Annals of Tourism Research為雙月刊,其最新一期(Volume 113, July 2025)包括“Articles”“Research Notes and Reports”兩個欄目,共計12篇文章,詳情如下。
Articles
Metatheorizing tourist flow at macro-level: Universal forces theory and herding among tourists
Seonjin Lee, Lori Pennington-Gray
This study specifically examines the state of tourism theories and their role in advancing our knowledge. The theoretical fragmentation of the field has been a major hurdle in the progression of tourism knowledge . Tourism studies have been importing numerous theories from other disciplines “rather than aiming to develop and advance theory in or of tourism”. Indeed, the prevalence of theory importation is unsurprising given the multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary, and post-disciplinary nature of the tourism field. Less evident is that sets of ideas and assumptions are also being borrowed from related disciplines. As Jafari elegantly states, “anthropology of tourism is a single-lens view/treatment, and so is psychology of tourism, geography of tourism, and the like” . These theoretical lenses are not impartial. Each brings distinct foci that shape our understanding of tourism. Consequently, unraveling knowledge and truths unique to tourism necessitates dedicated theories; perhaps one that transcends disciplines.
Synthetic tourist experience
Li Miao, Fiona X. Yang, Qiao Zhang, Kanye Ye Wang
1Synthetic reality—characterized by the increasingly blurring boundaries between physical and virtual worlds—is reshaping tourist experiences. This forward-looking conceptual research re-examines the tourist experience from an ontological perspective, positioning synthetic reality as an integrated super-reality transcending the physical–virtual dichotomy. Using the six-dimensional consumer experience framework as an organizing structure, this research discusses key experiential qualities of the synthetic tourist experience: surreality, symbiosis, discrete emotions, extended cognition, syntheticity, and meta-interactivity. Critical theoretical considerations of each proposed experiential quality are also discussed. This study further outlines a future research agenda for a better understanding of the synthetic tourist experience.
Carbon tax and tourism consumption
Nguyen Doan, Canh Phuc Nguyen
This study explores the impact on tourism consumption of implementing a carbon tax. Employing a difference-in-differences model for a sample of 117 countries from 1995 to 2019, we find that a carbon tax has a significant negative effect on domestic tourism spending but a weak positive effect on outbound tourism spending. On average, implementing a carbon tax decreases domestic tourism spending by 12 %. In contrast, such an environmental policy increases outbound tourism. Interestingly, when considering the intermediary channels of income and price level, the mechanism analysis shows suggestive evidence that implementing a carbon tax increases the price level, which is then transmitted to decreased domestic tourism consumption but does not affect outbound tourism.
The memory effect of destination dialect advertising
Lujun Su, Chengzhi Ye, Xuehuan He
Tourism is fundamentally a consumption of places, making place elements essential in destination marketing. This research investigates the emerging practice of using dialect elements in destination advertising through the theoretical lens of symbolic interactionism, focusing on advertising memory as a key measure of advertising effectiveness. Five main studies (and three supplemental studies) across Eastern and Western cultures demonstrate a robust memory effect of destination advertising with dialect elements. Specifically, such advertising enhances perceived placeness compared to counterparts using the corresponding standard language, thereby resulting in superior memory effectiveness. Furthermore, these effects are attenuated for destinations low in cultural symbolism. These findings advance current knowledge on destination dialect marketing while offering practical guidance to design memorable destination advertising.
How the elderly tackle age discrimination from human or AI servers
Guangmei Jia, Xiaoyan Luo, Lisa C. Wan
Although the rapid expansion of digital services in the tourism and hospitality industry has highlighted instances of age discrimination perpetuated by artificial intelligence (AI), a significant research gap remains regarding how senior visitors respond to such discrimination. This study employs a mixed-methods approach to compare the reactions of senior tourists to age discrimination originating from AI versus human servers. The results showed that both human- and AI-driven discrimination reduced senior tourists' purchase likelihood compared to non-discriminatory scenarios. However, older tourists reacted less negatively to AI-driven (vs. human-driven) discrimination, which posed a smaller threat to their age-related self-worth. This effect was observed only when in-group customers (e.g., older customers) were present, but not when out-group customers (e.g., younger customers) were present.
Affective authentication: Transforming strangers into family
Oren T. Segal, Carol A. Kidron
We present a qualitative study of amateur genealogists' first encounters with newly-discovered co-descendants as tourist objects on the move in Israel, Hungary and the United States. Interviewees' intersubjective interaction and heritage ‘doing’ disclose ancestral mutuality of being transforming strangers into affectively authenticated family. Data depicts a dialectical process between cool and hot authentication unique to the tourist context of distance/proximity and home/away together activating family-relatedness. Reconceptualizing the binary of cool-hot authentication, we propose a gradational authentication process whereby the “warming effect” of affect fuels transitions between cold, warm and hot authentication constituting intersubjective tourist moments and dyadic existential identities. Findings problematize disciplinary framing of family tourism and genealogical tourism while contributing to research on non-familial local-tourist relations and hospitality/experiential tourism.
Tourism and social representations of Sherpas from Nepal
Roshis Krishna Shrestha, Michelle Whitford, Jing Zhang
Sherpas are Indigenous people from Nepal's Khumbu region. This study examines social representations of Sherpas in media articles since the 1950s. Using social representation theory and complexity theory, it explores how Sherpas navigate externally imposed representations while redefining themselves as cultural ambassadors, entrepreneurs, and environmental leaders. Using discourse content analysis (combining critical discourse analysis with summative content analysis), this study identifies three forms of representation acceptance: enduring, evolving and emerging. It introduces the concept of intergenerational representation entrapment, highlighting the tension between traditional roles and aspirations for socio-economic mobility. The study advocates for a nuanced understanding of Indigenous representations, arguing that tourism can be a transformative platform for empowerment and socio-economic progress beyond traditional labour roles.
Tourism and new rurality: gentrified space versus co-created place
Yi Wang, Zhuowei Huang, Aihan Fan
This study develops a conceptual framework of rural tourism placemaking based on gentrified space in China's desakota villages. It indicates three types of rural tourism placemaking and uncover the underlying power relationships between tourists, local villagers and owners of gentrified premises that shape the varied placemaking. In particular, the present study pinpoints the importance of co-creation in rural tourism placemaking with three stages: physical reconstructing, local participation in tourism, and relational integration between multiple parties. This study indicates that the rural tourism placemaking through co-creation involves a balanced power relationship between multiple parties and transforms the space to a meaningful place that each party can claim and benefit from.
Research article
International tourism and global biodiversity risks
Yingtong Chen, Fei Wu, Dayong Zhang, Qiang Ji
The impact of international tourism on biodiversity risks has received considerable attention, yet quantitative research in this field remains relatively limited. This study constructs a biodiversity risk index for 155 countries and regions spanning the years 2001 to 2019, analyzing how international tourism influences biodiversity risks in destination countries. The results indicate that the growth of international tourism significantly elevates biodiversity risks, with these effects displaying both lagged and cumulative characteristics. Furthermore, spatial analysis shows that international tourism also intensifies biodiversity risks in neighboring countries. The extent of its impact varies according to the tourism model and destination. In addition, government regulations and international financial assistance play a crucial role in mitigating the biodiversity risks associated with international tourism.
Advancing climate justice in tourism: A critical evaluation of the TPCC Stocktake
Susanne Becken, Raymond Rastegar
In late 2023, the Tourism Panel on Climate Change (TPCC) released the first global Tourism and Climate Change Stocktake to assess if the sector is making adequate progress on climate actions. The TPCC is an independent network that was founded with broad sector support (including through an Advisory Group that included representatives from UN Tourism, World Economic Forum, a former tourism minister, and UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change expert). Bringing together 60 experts, the report informed and supported work presented at the first thematic day on tourism at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan. The report delivers a stark message: “At present, no country, no destination, and no sub-sector have achieved meaningful reductions in tourism greenhouse gas emissions” (TPCC, 2023, p.2). This conclusion is pertinent to all aspects of tourism, including destination management, business practices, and visitor behaviour.
Impact of relative price on airline revenues
Subin Hong, John Frankie O'Connell, Bora Kim, Janghee Cho
This study bridges an empirical gap by employing the relative price to analyse how pricing strategies between business and economy classes serve as signals of quality and impact airline profitability. Relative price quantifies the deviation of business and economy class pricing of an airline from the average fare on specific routes, providing a nuanced measure of how airlines use price differentiation as a mechanism to convey service quality. At each airline level, relative price is a strategy characterised by setting higher business class fares to maximise revenue, while offering lower economy class fares to boost sales. As most routes offer two or three distinct quality tiers, such as business and economy class, this market structure is particularly well-suited for such an investigation. Furthermore, competitive routes represent high-demand market where multiple airlines with varying characteristics operate, while non-competitive routes tend to have lower demand. Consequently, the extent to which market share signals quality may vary across markets. It is more likely to reflect quality in competitive routes, while in less competitive markets, where consumer choice is limited, it may instead reflect a lack of alternatives rather than superior service. By analysing the impact of relative price signals on airline revenues across different market contexts using real-world airline data, this study contributes to signalling theory by exploring these dynamics in a practical, real-world setting.
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《中國社會學(xué)學(xué)刊》(The Journal of Chinese Sociology)于2014年10月由中國社會科學(xué)院社會學(xué)研究所創(chuàng)辦。作為中國大陸第一本英文社會學(xué)學(xué)術(shù)期刊,JCS致力于為中國社會學(xué)者與國外同行的學(xué)術(shù)交流和合作打造國際一流的學(xué)術(shù)平臺。JCS由全球最大科技期刊出版集團(tuán)施普林格·自然(Springer Nature)出版發(fā)行,由國內(nèi)外頂尖社會學(xué)家組成強(qiáng)大編委會隊伍,采用雙向匿名評審方式和“開放獲取”(open access)出版模式。JCS已于2021年5月被ESCI收錄。2022年,JCS的CiteScore分值為2.0(Q2),在社科類別的262種期刊中排名第94位,位列同類期刊前36%。2025年JCS最新影響因子1.3,位列社會學(xué)領(lǐng)域期刊全球前53%(Q3)。
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