Geplaatst op: 22-01-2025
Auteur: Neil Carr & Stuart Hayes
University of Otago
Publicatie: UNCOVER08

Hoping the WLO can help resist voices of the illiberal right

A call from Otago, New Zealand

Hoping the WLO can help resist voices of the illiberal right

The Department of Tourism at the University of Otago has been a World Leisure Center of Excellence since 2018. Known also by the M?ori title of ?t?kou Whakaihu Waka, the University is located in Dunedin, in the South Island of New Zealand. Dunedin is renowned for its diverse natural landscapes, unique wildlife species and multicultural heritage. It is possible to construct an image of this WLCE as being a long way from everywhere else, disconnected from the rest of the world and out of touch. Certainly, the recent experience of the Covid-19 pandemic, during which New Zealand’s borders were closed for a long period and life within them went on pretty much as before while so much of the rest of the world struggled. Yet seen from a different perspective, New Zealand is one of the first places in the world where the new day dawns. As such, it may be said to lead the world, not merely follow in everyone else’s shadow.

Professor Neil Carr and Dr Stuart Hayes work for the Department of Tourism, University of Otago - Otakou Whakaihu Waka, New Zealand.

This is how the Department has positioned itself throughout its lifespan since it was established in the early 1990s. It has long been recognised as being home to some of the world’s leading thinkers, researchers, learners, and teachers in the fields of tourism and leisure studies. They work across a range of topics, all reflecting both the social phenomena and large and diverse industries that are tourism and leisure. Current research foci in the Department include welfare, rights, and freedom (of humans and the more than human), indigeneity, invasive species, mobilities, placemaking, sustainability, ethics, and identity.

An integral component of the research environment at Otago is the PhD student community that regularly sees over 30 students from around the world working on diverse topics. On completion of their PhDs, they then scatter across the planet, providing a nice representation of Otago being at the leading edge of each new day, whose wave then spreads across the globe to help push forward knowledge and understandings around tourism and leisure. Alongside the PhD programme, the Department academics often supervise interdisciplinary students from other related departments (e.g. Physical Education) and DBA (Doctor of Business Administration) students. It also operates one of the world’s leading master’s programmes and a successful undergraduate programme in the field of tourism. Like the PhD students, master’s and bachelor’s students come to Otago from all over the world and after graduating spread out, to enjoy the delights of New Zealand and the rest of the world.

The department has long been recognised as being home to some of the world’s leading thinkers, researchers, learners, and teachers in the fields of tourism and leisure studies.

The value of internationalisation

The internationalisation of higher education in New Zealand encompasses various dimensions such as student mobility, academic collaboration, research and teaching partnerships, and institutional linkages. At the University of Otago, the current internationalisation strategy - Te Aka Whakaranea ?-Ao – sets out various goals linked to, among other aspects, increasing student recruitment, student exchanges, and international articulation agreements; improving global partnerships (e.g. World Leisure Organization, Matariki Network of Universities, Erasmus exchanges); and maintaining "an active and internationally connected research culture” (University of Otago, 2024, p. 15).

Internationalisation brings myriad benefits for the University of Otago, as it does for New Zealand’s other universities. Firstly, it enhances cultural diversity and promotes intercultural understanding among students, faculty, and staff, enriching the learning environment and fostering global citizenship. Moreover, international collaborations contribute to the advancement of research and innovation.

Economically, international education generates significant revenue for the University of Otago, through tuition fees, accommodation, and ancillary services. Relatedly, and at a broader level, pre-Covid there were 34,000 international students studying in New Zealand, and a return to these numbers is expected soon. According to Universities New Zealand (2024), 92% of international students choose to study here because of the reputation of New Zealand universities: all eight universities are ranked within the top 3% in the world and, moreover, New Zealand universities were ranked in the top 50 universities in the world in 22 different subjects, and in the top 100 in 39 (out of a possible 46) subjects. Despite the clear economic benefits associated with international student tuition fees, an over-reliance on this source of revenue can be risky, especially in times of economic uncertainty or geopolitical instability. Diversifying income streams is, therefore, arguably vital to mitigate such risks.

The Department of Tourism, University of Otago, works towards maximising the benefits of internationalisation in different ways. Beyond the continual development and promotion of our programmes to international students, staff are heavily invested in maintaining strong relationships with alumni. Particularly among PhD alumni, these relationships have blossomed into meaningful research collaborations addressing some of the important questions relevant to tourism and leisure.

Being part of the WLO network

Over the last couple of years, our partnership with the WLO has also provided an important opportunity to connect with tourism and leisure researchers and students from around the world. The recent World Leisure Congress, held in Dunedin in 2023, was a major milestone in this relationship. Moreover, the Department of Tourism sees exciting potential to further develop internationalisation initiatives with, and alongside, the WLO, not least of all in terms of developing joint degree programmes and PhD supervision with other WLCEs.

The challenge for WLO is to bring those voices together, to make them heard in the face of the noise from those who would see an end to diversity.

There are so many questions in the world today that benefit from being addressed by multinational groupings in global settings, ones that shift beyond the traditional dominance of western-centric thinking. Yet thinking locally and respecting the specificity of place is vital within this setting of inclusive globalisation. To take understandings of leisure and tourism forward within this context demands multiple international cooperations across researchers, teachers, learners, and publishers. The WLO network offers one such vehicle to enable us to engage with people from diverse locations, with differing perspectives and ways of knowing.

A crucial role for the WLO to play

We have lived a wave of rising liberalism and acceptance of diversity over the last couple of decades. For anyone who believes in the rights of the individual to self-expression it has been a beautiful journey. Today, we see such acceptance under pressure in many parts of the world, threatening to roll back the acceptance of individuality. Knowing that leisure and tourism are key components of community and individual well-being, destinations are sites for expression of, and learning about, the self. The hope is that the WLO, and all those working in the field, can help to fight back against the voices of the illiberal right. Is leisure studies best situated for such an undertaking? Carr (2022) has argued that, despite the demise of so many leisure studies departments in the world’s universities, the field is actually very healthy, filled with passionate individuals researching topics central to the above concern. The challenge for WLO is to bring those voices together, to make them heard in the face of the noise from those who would see an end to diversity, with all the associated negative connotations for individual and societal well-being. WLO also needs to bring the international and cultural diversity of tourism academics into the fold, setting aside age-old angst about the relation between leisure and tourism to walk the talk of acceptance of diversity. They need to do this to unite the voices of leisure and tourism scholars around the welfare of the individual (in all its diversity, incorporating everyone, be they human or more than human), society, and the planet.

Sources

  • Carr, N. (2022). Doom-mongers beware: An analysis of the health of leisure studies. Leisure Studies. 41 (2): 151 – 163.
    - New Zealand Universities. (2024). International students. Retrieved from https://www.universitiesnz.ac.nz/international-students.
  • University of Otago. (2024). Te Aka Whakaranea ?-Ao: 2021–25 Internationalisation Framework. Retrieved from https://www.otago.ac.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0019/314740/download-te-aka-whakaranea-a-ao-2021-2025-829857.pdf.

Dit artikel is eerder verschenen in Uncover, een uitgave van het domein Leisure & Events van de Breda University of Applied Sciences. Nieuwsgierig naar de andere artikelen uit Uncover? Stuur dan een mailtje naar ton@nrit.nl.
Trefwoorden: University of Otago, World Leisure Center of Excellence (WLCE), Toerisme. Recreatie, Internationale samenwerking, Onderzoek, Culturele diversiteit, Studentenmobiliteit, Internationale studenten, Wereld Leisure Congres, Intercultureel begrip, Duurzaamheid, Academische internationalisering

CELTH



||| Nieuws |||

06/01/26
Barbara Oomen wordt directeur Watersnoodmuseum
Barbara Oomen - afgelopen drie jaar directeur HZ University of Applied Sciences in Vlissingen - wordt de nieuwe directeur-bestuurder van het Watersnoodmuseum. Zij neemt vanaf 15 januari 2026 het stokje over van Siemco Louwerse, die eind vorig jaar afscheid nam.
05/01/26
Exclusief voor leden
Natuurhuisje lanceert nieuwe campagne ‘Ik wacht op je’
Het nieuwe jaar werd door boekingsplatform afgetrapt met de campagne 'Ik wacht op je. Hiermee keert het platform na aandacht voor niet ver reizen in de campagne 'Niet vliegen wel landen' weer terug bij de kern van Natuurhuisje, de liefde voor de natuur.
05/01/26
Avonturenpark Hellendoorn viert 90-jarig jubileum en bouwt nieuwe attractie: OerKracht
Avonturenpark Hellendoorn maakt zich op voor een bijzonder feestelijk jaar. In 2026 bestaat het park 90 jaar en dat jubileum wordt groots gevierd. Tegelijkertijd opent het park de nieuwe attractie OerKracht, een 12 meter hoge reuzenschommel.
05/01/26
Inrichten van een vakantiewoning door minimalisme met een warme twist
Als we kijken naar de trends in de reiswereld en de inrichting van luxe vakantievilla’s en hotels, valt één ding op: we zijn klaar met visuele drukte. De tijd van volgestouwde interieurs met veel tierelantijnen en schreeuwerige prints is voorbij. De moderne reiziger, en dus ook de moderne huiseigenaar, zoekt naar plekken die de geest tot rust brengen. In de hospitality branche wordt dit vaak vertaald naar designs die de natuur naar binnen halen en die eenvoud omarmen. Een trend die hier naadloos op aansluit en die we steeds vaker terugzien in high-end projecten, is de Japandi stijl. Het combineert de Japanse liefde voor imperfectie (Wabi-Sabi) met de Scandinavische hygge.
05/01/26
Openluchtmuseum behaalt bezoekersrecord in 2025
Het was een spannend jaar voor het Nederlands Openluchtmuseum. Kon het de legendarische grens van 600.000 bezoekers passeren? Het is net niet gelukt. Het is wel een nieuw bezoekersrecord geworden.
05/01/26
Exclusief voor leden
Werknemer wil zich graag ontwikkelen in 2026
Meer dan een kwart (27%) van de Nederlandse werknemers wil in 2026 een cursus, training of opleiding volgen via het werk. Het meest opvallend is het hoge realisatiepercentage: 77% verwacht dit voornemen ook écht waar te maken in 2026.
30/12/25
VrijetijdsTrends 2026: Balans, Kamperen en Hyperpersonalisatie domineren het jaar
Het jaar 2026 zal voor de vrije tijd draaien om balanstijd, camping comeback, slow travel en hyperpersonalisatie. Bestedingen aan leisure en toerisme stijgen licht met 1-2%. Wat ziet Goof Lukken in deze trends nog meer?
23/12/25
Horeca in 2026: Gematigde groei, bij stijgende prijzen
De vooruitzichten voor de Nederlandse horeca in 2026 zijn voorzichtig positief. Consumenten geven naar verwachting iets meer uit dankzij een verbeterde koopkracht, maar uitbundige groei blijft uit. ING Research voorspelt een volumegroei van circa 1% voor de sector bij een gemiddelde prijsstijging van 4%. Het lage consumentenvertrouwen en zorgen over hoge prijzen temperen de bestedingen.

||| Agenda |||

07/01/26 t/m 08-01-26
07/01/26 t/m 08-01-26: Travel Trade Days 2026
De Travel Trade Days zijn kennis- en netwerkdagen voor de professionele reisbranche in de Benelux. G...
08/01/26 t/m 11-01-26
08/01/26 t/m 11-01-26: Vakantiebeurs 2026 - De wereld aan je voeten
De wereld ligt aan je voeten op Vakantiebeurs. Proef nieuwe smaken, ontmoet reizigers met bijzondere...
27/01/26 t/m 30-01-26
27/01/26 t/m 30-01-26: ENTER2026 eTourism Conference
De Breda University of Applied Sciences organiseert in januari 2026 de ENTER2026 eTourism Conference...
12/02/26
12/02/26 t/m 12-02-26: Dagrecreatie Live
Op 12 februari 2026 vindt het gloednieuwe event Dagrecreatie Live plaats in Evenementenhal Gorinchem...
09/03/26
09/03/26 t/m 09-03-26: Nationaal Congres Evenementen 9 maart 2026
11? NCE is in Zandvoort op 9 maart 2026. De gemeente heeft zich, in samenwerking Zandvoort Marketing...