TY - JOUR TI - Transformative epistemologies for regenerative tourism: towards a decolonial paradigm in science and practice? AU - Bellato, Loretta AU - Frantzeskaki, Niki AU - Lee, Emma AU - Cheer, Joseph M. AU - Peters, Andrew T2 - Journal of Sustainable Tourism AB - There is a growing scholarly interest in the potential of regenerative tourism approaches to address sustainability challenges. Drawing from an ecological worldview that interweaves Indigenous and Western knowledge systems, regenerative tourism approaches seek to increase the capacity of support systems for fulfilling net-positive social-ecological effects. We argue that Western scientific paradigms drive current tourism research methodologies and are sometimes insufficient and unfit to (advance) regenerative tourism research. The extent to which new research methodological approaches can align with the ecological worldview and regenerative paradigm is an underpinning premise. As part of a broader study of the emerging regenerative tourism concept, a scoping review of 84 peer-reviewed and 116 grey literature articles, supplemented by consultations with nine regenerative tourism practitioners, six Indigenous practitioners and one cultural knowledge holder, identified nine research gaps that explicate this mismatch. An analytical framework guided the gap analysis and the formulation of a future research agenda. Findings suggest that tourism scholarship is not keeping pace with the evolution of regenerative tourism, requiring additional and new approaches. A transformational decolonial, transdisciplinary research paradigm is proposed that fully embraces the regenerative tourism paradigm and thus enables knowledge production that facilitates plural regenerative tourism futures. DA - 2023/05/08/ PY - 2023 DO - 10.1080/09669582.2023.2208310 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 0 IS - 0 SP - 1 EP - 21 SN - 0966-9582 ST - Transformative epistemologies for regenerative tourism UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/09669582.2023.2208310 Y2 - 2023/05/09/00:57:24 KW - Urban planning ER - TY - JOUR TI - Planning Ecologically Just Cities: A Framework to Assess Ecological Injustice Hotspots for Targeted Urban Design and Planning of Nature-Based Solutions AU - Pineda-Pinto, Melissa AU - Frantzeskaki, Niki AU - Chandrabose, Manoj AU - Herreros-Cantis, Pablo AU - McPhearson, Timon AU - Nygaard, Christian A. AU - Raymond, Christopher T2 - Urban Policy and Research AB - This paper presents a typology of ecological injustice hotspots for targeted design of nature-based solutions to guide planning and designing of just cities. The typology demonstrates how the needs and capabilities of nonhuman nature can be embedded within transitions to multi- and interspecies relational futures that regenerate and protect urban social-ecological systems. We synthesise the findings of previous quantitative and qualitative analyses to develop the Ecologically Just Cities Framework that (1) works as a diagnostic tool to characterise four types of urban ecological injustices and (2) identifies nature-based planning actions that can best respond to different types of place-based ecological injustices. DA - 2022/07/03/ PY - 2022 DO - 10.1080/08111146.2022.2093184 DP - Taylor and Francis+NEJM VL - 40 IS - 3 SP - 206 EP - 222 SN - 0811-1146 ST - Planning Ecologically Just Cities UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/08111146.2022.2093184 Y2 - 2023/05/09/01:18:02 KW - Urban planning ER -