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TOURIST INDUSTRY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   093760


Manufacturing exotica: Edith Wharton and tourism in French Morocco, 1917-20 / Hunter, F Robert   Journal Article
Hunter, F Robert Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The subject of this article is creation of a set of exotic images used by the early tourist industry to market Morocco. The author argues that Edith Wharton's book, In Morocco, was instrumental in this process. The images conveyed by Wharton are described, explained, and linked to similar images appearing in tourist publications.
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2
ID:   113402


Threat and risk: what is the difference and why does it matter? / Strachan-Morris, David   Journal Article
Strachan-Morris, David Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Since the events of 9/11 the terms 'threat' and 'risk' have entered the daily lexicon to a greater extent than ever before. News media report on changes to national threat assessments, commenting when the threat level rises from 'Moderate' to 'Substantial', in the case of the United Kingdom. The British government recently released a document that provided details of the issues that pose the highest risk to the national infrastructure. All of these are based, so we are told, on the work of the national intelligence agencies. But what are these indicators actually telling us and what is the relationship between threat assessments and risk assessments? These are both important questions because important decisions are made as a result of changes in these assessments. National defence and security planning is based upon perceived threats and risks. An entire risk management industry has grown up in the business world that covers everything from health and safety to financial risk. It is not only governments and businesses that base decisions on these indicators, but individuals as well. Tourists planning holidays in Europe were alarmed when the British, French and German governments increased their threat levels in response to intelligence that suggested that an attack against tourist sites in their respective capitals was imminent. Some will have changed their plans and travelled elsewhere, to the detriment of the tourist industry, while others will have chosen to defy the terrorists and travel anyway - potentially placing themselves in harm's way. With so much at stake, both nationally and individually, it is therefore important that we understand the difference between a 'threat' and a 'risk' and, as scholars of intelligence, the role that intelligence plays in assessing them.
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