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The political economy of orphanage tourism in Cambodia

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The political economy of orphanage tourism in Cambodia
Abstract
A recent Aljazeera report on ‘Cambodia’s Orphan Business’ explains ‘how “voluntourism” could be fuelling the exploitation of Cambodian children’. Anti-orphanage tourism movements have emerged to resist the growth of Cambodia’s contested orphanage tourism industry, which is blamed for widespread corruption and the exploitation of children for profit. Taking a Polanyian political economy approach, this article illustrates how the emergence of and response to the orphanage tourism industry represent, in Karl Polanyi’s words, a ‘double movement’ between the neoliberalization of orphanages and the corollary protective countermovement by anti-orphanage tourism campaigns that challenge the industry’s morality and legitimacy. It argues that while resistance to the commodification of orphanages under the newly neoliberalized Cambodian economy reflects Polanyi’s double movement thesis, the limits of this resistance are also indicative of how countermovements are challenged by the broader political economy in which they operate.
Publication
Tourist Studies
Volume
15
Issue
2
Pages
132-155
Date
2015-08-01
Journal Abbr
Tourist Studies
Language
English
ISSN
1468-7976, 1741-3206
Accessed
2016-11-08, 4:43 p.m.
Library Catalog
Citation
Guiney, Tess, and Mary Mostafanezhad. 2015. “The Political Economy of Orphanage Tourism in Cambodia.” Tourist Studies 15 (2): 132–55. DOI: 10.1177/1468797614563387.
Publication year
Keywords
  • Cambodia
  • double movement
  • hospitality, leisure, sport & tourism
  • orphanage tourism
  • tourism
  • tourist studies
  • volunteer tourism

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