Documents found
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71.More information
Lifestyle migrations are characterized by the ability of the migrants to choose to rebuild their home elsewhere, whether as a result of a professional dissatisfaction or a desire to build a new life elsewhere. In working families, these lifestyle choices are not necessarily supported by an anticipation of the financial costs associated with the change of location and knowledge of the local job market. In order to continue to earn sufficient income to carry out this project and, for some, not give up a career, one spouse embraces a mobile lifestyle. This article aims at understanding the effects of the entanglement of these lifestyles through an analysis of how the mobile workers live in the different spaces of travel in order to question what is affected by the mobile lifestyle. Focusing on the particular group of lifestyle migrants encountered during the research, the aim is to question how mobility and migration can intertwine or exclude each other and the effects of this lifestyle.
Keywords: Ortar, mobilité professionnelle, famille, routine, migration de style de vie, temps, habiter, Ortar, professional mobility, family, routine, lifestyle migration, time, dwelling, Ortar, movilidad profesional, familia, rutina, migración de estilo de vida, tiempo, residir
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73.More information
With the near general closure of borders in 2020, many European states have encouraged their citizens to resort to domestic tourism, i.e. , within their borders, to avoid the collapse of an entire section of their economy. Is this the sign of a permanent evolution of the tourism model toward a practice of proximity, as some authors suggest that the crisis linked to COVID-19 could finally put an end to international (over-)tourism, which has been decried for several years? This analysis is subject to debate. By examining the crises of the 20 th century and the beginning of the 21 st century, this article proposes to understand how the dynamics of international tourism and domestic tourism in Europe have been associated, with a particular focus on the French case. It is a cumulative process (and not an opposing one) that gradually took place during the 20 th century in Europe. If international tourism has been systematically perceived as a tool for capturing the foreign currency necessary for post-crisis recovery since the First World War, gradually serving as a model (as with a strategy to move upmarket during the Great Depression), domestic tourism, due to its permanence, has often been used by the tourist actors in order to lay the foundations for international tourism, for example with the investment plans in the second half of the 20 th century. In that respect, the study of the long term offers a necessary perspective to better perceive the stakes involved in the management of tourism during the crisis that arose from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Keywords: crise, international, domestique, investissements, satisfaction., crisis, international, domestic, investments, satisfaction.
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