Navigating the Galápagos paradox: tourism growth management discourses in protected areas

  • Chloe King*
  • , Carter Hunt
  • , María José Barragán-Paladines
  • , Andrea Muñoz-Barriga
  • , Veronica Santa Maria
  • , Susana Cárdenas Díaz
  • , Lucía Norris
  • , Norman Wray Reyes
  • , Robert Bensted-Smith
  • , Chris Sandbrook
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In tourism literature and practice, pro-growth tourism management discourses argue that tourism growth can decouple from its negative impacts through improved management, whereas heterodox approaches reject tourism’s growth ethic and argue decoupling is infeasible and unlikely. Heterodox tourism scholarship increasingly seeks to imagine what a ‘beyond growth’ transition may entail, through concepts such as regenerative tourism, degrowth, and buen vivir. Among the first UNESCO World Heritage Sites and most iconic Biosphere Reserves, the Galápagos Islands in Ecuador present a critical case study, having experienced a 260% increase in tourism arrivals over the past two decades while attempting to enact a heterodox transition. The purpose of this paper is to examine how diverse stakeholders in these islands construct and contest discourses of tourism growth, with implications for transitions towards ‘post-growth’ or heterodox tourism paradigms. Building upon decades of combined research in Galápagos among our author team, this paper draws most specifically on data gathered from a three-day participatory workshop in August 2023 involving sixty key Galápagos tourism stakeholders. Findings identified two primary discourse coalitions—those critiquing and those defending land-based tourism growth—and compares how pro-growth and heterodox management discourses manifest among them. Findings reveal that although these coalitions adopt different discursive strategies where growth is most contentious, there is shared consensus around strategies for managing growth that align with heterodox paradigms. A key contribution of this paper is to highlight how managing tourism growth in Biosphere Reserves—of increasing concern as overtourism challenges proliferate globally—cannot rely solely on technical interventions. Our findings show how divergent discourse coalitions construct prosperity in competing ways, revealing why inclusive engagement with plural values, contested meanings, and local power dynamics is indispensable for navigating overtourism challenges in fragile island settings.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTourism Geographies
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Funding

This publication is contribution number 2774 of the Charles Darwin Foundation for the Galapagos Islands. The authors would like to acknowledge the Galápagos National Park, the Charles Darwin Foundation, and the UK Economic and Social Research Council for permitting, hosting, and funding this research, respectively. Thanks also to the Galápagos National Park Directorate for co-hosting and co-organizing the workshop, and to the Galápagos Conservation Trust, Christ’s College Darwin Fund, and the Galápagos HUB for Sustainability, Innovation, and Resilience for funding the workshop. Our sincere gratitude to all workshop participants for committing their time and ongoing energies to this workshop and continued efforts to improve tourism management in the Galápagos Islands, efforts that have since extended far beyond this initial workshop.

Funders
Galapagos Conservation Trust
Economic and Social Research Council
Galápagos HUB
Galápagos National Park
Christ’s College Darwin Fund
Fundación Charles Darwin

    Keywords

    • biosphere reserves
    • Buen Vivir
    • degrowth
    • discourse analysis
    • Ecuador
    • Galápagos National Park
    • heterodox tourism management
    • overtourism
    • Regenerative tourism
    • UNESCO

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