Articles | Open Access |

Populism, Nationalism, And The Transformation Of Global Tourism: Political Ideologies, Destination Dynamics, And The Reconfiguration Of The Tourist Gaze

Abstract

The resurgence of populism and nationalism across diverse political contexts has profoundly altered the global tourism landscape. Tourism, once primarily framed through economic development, cultural exchange, and leisure mobility, has increasingly become entangled with ideological narratives emphasizing sovereignty, identity, security, and exclusion. This article offers a comprehensive theoretical and analytical exploration of how populist political movements and governments reshape tourism development, destination management, tourist behavior, and global travel patterns. Drawing strictly on established scholarly literature, the study synthesizes insights from political economy, cultural theory, sustainability studies, and tourism sociology to illuminate the multidimensional impacts of populism on tourism systems. The article adopts a qualitative, interpretive methodology grounded in critical literature analysis, enabling a deep engagement with conceptual debates rather than empirical generalization. Findings indicate that populist ideologies influence tourism through five interrelated mechanisms: the politicization of national branding, the securitization of mobility, the reconfiguration of sustainability discourses, the reshaping of overtourism narratives, and the transformation of the tourist gaze. Populist governance often promotes selective openness, privileging certain tourist flows while discouraging others, and reframes tourism as a tool of national affirmation rather than cosmopolitan exchange. At the same time, resistance to globalization embedded in populism generates paradoxical outcomes, as tourism remains economically indispensable even to nationalist regimes. The discussion critically examines these contradictions, addresses theoretical limitations, and identifies future research directions in a world marked by ideological polarization and mobility inequalities. The article concludes that understanding tourism in the age of populism requires moving beyond apolitical economic models toward a politically informed, ethically grounded, and socially reflexive framework.

Keywords

Populism, Nationalism, Global Tourism

References

Baker, C., & Nissen, P. (2021). The global impact of populism on tourism: A comprehensive overview.

Benyamin, G. (2019). Nationalism in tourism: How populist governments are reshaping the global tourism industry.

Hall, C. M., & Gössling, S. (2016). The interactions between tourism and global environmental change: Political influences and shifting dynamics.

Halkier, B., & Hovgaard, L. (2019). Tourism preferences in the age of populism and nationalism.

Jafari, J. (2021). The effects of populist governments on tourism development and global travel patterns.

Mansfeld, Y., & Pizam, A. (2020). Tourism, safety, and security in the context of populist political shifts.

Papageorgiou, A., & Kolios, A. (2018). Overtourism, sustainability, and the rising influence of populist ideologies.

Parker, S., & McDonald, C. (2017). Tourism, nationalism, and political economy in populist regimes.

Rydzik, A., & Mowforth, M. (2020). The influence of populism on tourism trends and destination management.

Urry, J. (2014). The evolving tourist gaze: Understanding the influence of political and cultural shifts.

Article Statistics

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Copyright License

Download Citations

How to Cite

Rajesh Verma. (2026). Populism, Nationalism, And The Transformation Of Global Tourism: Political Ideologies, Destination Dynamics, And The Reconfiguration Of The Tourist Gaze. International Interdisciplinary Business Economics Advancement Journal, 7(01), 1-5. https://www.iibajournal.org/index.php/iibeaj/article/view/81