Beyond Western Dominance? The Rise of Asia and the Middle East in Global Tourism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63075/zc2jqy06Abstract
This conceptual study examines the changing dynamics of global tourism through a comparative analysis of destinations across five macro-regions: Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and the Americas. Drawing on qualitative content analysis of secondary sources, including policy documents, academic studies, and digital tourism narratives, the paper explores how tourism is increasingly shaped by governance strategies, digital media interaction, and sustainability-oriented development. The analysis indicates that emerging destinations, particularly in Asia and the Middle East, are becoming increasingly competitive with long-established Western destinations, not only through infrastructure investment but also through active policy entrepreneurship and culturally grounded digital storytelling. The study argues that global tourism is moving toward a more multipolar configuration, where narrative control, symbolic legitimacy, and digital agency play a central role in destination competitiveness. By integrating postcolonial perspectives with tourism governance and media-based branding, the paper offers a conceptual framework that helps explain contemporary shifts in global tourism hierarchies and provides directions for future empirical research.
Keywords- Global Tourism, Emerging Destinations, Destination Branding, Digital Storytelling, Sustainable Tourism, Policy Entrepreneurship, Postcolonial Tourism