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MIRAB (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   069188


Managing the hinterland beyond: two ideal-type strategies of economic development for small island territories / Baldacchino, Godfrey   Journal Article
Baldacchino, Godfrey Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Key Words Economic Development  MIRAB  Small Islands 
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2
ID:   069185


MIRAB model in the twenty-first century / Bertram, Geoff   Journal Article
Bertram, Geoff Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Key Words Migration  Diasporas  Aid  MIRAB  Small Islands 
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3
ID:   069187


Pacific flows: the fluidity of remittances in the cook islands / Marsters, Evelyn; Lewis. Nick; Friesen. Wardlow   Journal Article
Marsters, Evelyn Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Key Words MIRAB  Cook Islands  Remittances 
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4
ID:   095587


SITEs revisited: socioeconomic and demographic contours of small island tourist economies / McElroy, Jerome L; Hamma, Perri E   Journal Article
McElroy, Jerome L Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This study attempts to do three things: (i) provide a review of recent advances in the small island economy literature using the tourism penetration index, (ii) update the impact of tourism across the same global sample of 36 small islands (less than 1 million in population and 5000 km2 in area) introduced in APV 47 (1) 2006, and (iii) employing an abbreviated version of the destination life cycle as a development paradigm, construct three different socioeconomic and demographic profiles based on low, intermediate and high tourism impact. Results using cross-sectional data of 27 indicators reveal three statistically distinct profiles that demonstrate three stages of economic development. Specifically, the findings contrast the low-income, labour-exporting, least tourism-penetrated MIRAB-type (Migrant/Remittances and Aid/Bureaucracy) emerging islands with their more advanced intermediate impact neighbours. In turn, the latter fall at a significant distance from the most successful small island tourist economy (SITE) destinations. Thus, this study further refines the characteristics of SITE islands and confirms the viability of tourism in general and the destination life cycle in particular as an effective engine and model, respectively, of island development.
Key Words Profit  Tourism  MIRAB  Island  Life Cycle  SITE 
Tourist Economies 
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