Milka Ivanova is a qualitative researcher who focuses on the ways ‘non-dominant’ narratives are re/created through tourism in the cases of dissonant and communist heritage. As such, Milka published her research in The Routledge Handbook of Cultural Tourism, Tourism Culture & Communication, and Sustainability of Tourism: Cultural and Environmental Perspectives. Dorina-Maria Buda conducts interdisciplinary research focusing on the interconnections between tourist spaces, people and emotions in times and places of socio-political conflict. She conducts ethnographic work in such places of on-going conflicts and turmoil like Jordan, Israel, and Palestine. She is the author of Affective Tourism: Dark Routes in Conflict. Elisa Burrai offers robust and thought-provoking critiques of concepts such as volunteer tourism and responsible tourism developed through ethnographic, critical, and qualitative methodological approaches that explore power and research methodologies, reflexivity, and positionality. Her work is published in Tourism Geographies, International Journal of Tourism Research, and Journal of Sustainable Tourism.
"""This volume is timely in a world significantly unsettled by converging crises including the Coronavirus pandemic, the climate emergency, and deep-seated racial injustices. This radical publication recognizes that in this context, existing ways of knowing, being in, and experiencing tourism are outdated and must be disrupted and transformed. The text’s 16 chapters rise expertly to this challenge with a degree of honesty and clarity, rarely witnessed in our field. I congratulate the editors for successfully combining such novel contributions into an exciting and coherent publication. Undoubtedly, this ambitious volume will become a classic in the field of critical tourism studies."" - Professor Donna Chambers, University of Sunderland ""While ostensibly about qualitative research in tourism studies, this book goes much wider and deeper. It addresses innovative, creative and disruptive methodologies in ways that will be transferable to many fields and disciplines in the social sciences and beyond. This highly ethical work challenges the domination of knowledges from the global North and amplifies voices from the margins. I would recommend it for any researcher, from academia or elsewhere, who wants to deepen their understanding of research methods."" - Dr. Helen Kara, Researcher, and Author of ‘Creative Research Methods in the Social Sciences: A Practical Guide’"