Geotourism is defined as tourism that sustains or enhances the geographical character of a place – its environment, culture, aesthetics, heritage, and the well-being of its residents. Geotourism incorporates the concept of sustainable tourism – that destinations should remain unspoiled for future generations – while allowing for enhancement that protects the character of the locale. Geotourism also adopts a principle from its cousin, ecotourism – that tourism revenue can promote conservation – and extends that principle beyond nature travel to encompass culture, history, and all distinctive assets of a place. "Geo-" in this context thus emphasizes "place" in a holistic manner, and points to tourism which is beneficial and engaged in positive ways with the entirety of the local world that is involved.
The Geotourism Charter: Governments and allied organizations can sign this statement of principles as a first step in adopting a geotourism strategy. Download the Geotourism Charter. After thus committing to a geotourism strategy, signatories should then work with local communities to determine their geotourism goals.
What is Sustainable Tourism?
What is Geotourism? Geotourism adds to sustainability principles by building on geographical character – “sense of place” – to create a type of tourism that emphasizes the distinctiveness of its locale, and that benefits visitor and resident alike.