Case Study: Albania
Sunday, November 22, 2009   08:21 GMT    
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ALBANIA BECKONS

Following up on the IPS case study of Albania as a nation looking for development through tourism, while also respecting ecological needs, Ilva Tare takes a look at moves to change the image of Albania. The first of a two-part video report on Albania.


Q&A: 'Investment in Transport Infrastructure Is the Most Important'
By Interview with Sokol Olldashi, Albanian Minister for Public Works
TIRANA - Roads, railways, ports and airports are being upgraded in a country where in spite of the challenges posed by poverty, investment in infrastructure has been dramatically increased.
MORE >>

 

ALBANIA: Heading for NATO, as a Gateway to the EU
By Zoltán Dujisin
TIRANA - Albanians are optimistic they will join NATO and draw closer to the dream of EU membership.
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ALBANIA: European Integration Takes More Than Attitude
By Alba Çela
TIRANA - Albanians are among the most Euro-enthusiastic people in the Western Balkans, surveys show. But that does not mean they believe they will join the EU in a hurry.
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ALBANIA: A Few Greeks Discover Their Neighbour
By Apostolis Fotiadis
ATHENS - Some years ago most Greeks knew Albania only as an unknown frontier. It was a country from which impoverished migrants crossed into Greece in search of a job and a better life; a place that people were leaving, where nobody wanted to go.
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ALBANIA: Civil Society Far from Local Needs
By Zoltán Dujisin
TIRANA - Achieving environmentally sustainable tourism in Albania will also be up to the efforts of communities and civil society organisations, but as in much of the post-socialist world, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and their donors will have to clean up their act first.
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  Cultural and Environmental Tourism - Global News

ENVIRONMENT-US: A Budding Market for Food Less Travelled
By Enrique Gili* - IPS/IFEJ
SAN DIEGO, California - The scent of portobello mushrooms wafts through the air as two of the three co-owners of Roots prep for their morning customers.
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ROMANIA: Villagers Resist a Corporation
By Claudia Ciobanu
ROSIA MONTANA - "I never had money, I never wanted money, and I never will want money." "I fear no one but God." "I will not leave this place for as long as I live." Such statements, from a small yet determined core of inhabitants of Rosia Montana are indication that the Canadian corporation that wants to dig for gold here could get blocked by at least some people.
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LATIN AMERICA: Nine Roads Through the Virgin Wilderness
By Marcela Valente
BARILOCHE, Argentina - In the name of development and integration, roads, bridges, dams, gas pipelines, ports and other infrastructure works are expanding in South America. But many of the projects are trampling roughshod over protected areas that preserve unique ecosystems and vulnerable native cultures.
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ENVIRONMENT: Conservation Expands in Latin America
By Marcela Valente*
BUENOS AIRES - In the past 10 years the size of protected areas in Latin America has nearly doubled and the participation of local communities in their preservation and management has sharply increased, says a regional study provided exclusively to Tierramérica.
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LABOUR-INDIA: Fisherwomen Question Tourism's 'Magic'
By M Martin
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, Kerala - Beatles star Sir Paul McCartney described his 2002 Kerala tour in one word – 'magical'. For thousands who throng the state's green villages, picturesque backwaters and beaches, the experience is no less than a 'Magical Mystery Tour’. But local fisherwomen say it means new and harsh realities for them.
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Cultural and Environmental Tourism:
Albania has made strides in establishing the foundations of democratic institutions and a market economy, including its 1998 Constitution. In 2000, Albania became a member of the World Trade Organisation, which illustrates its determination to build an open and integrated economy.

And yet it remains Europe's last "unknown" country -- in part, because it is not an easy tourism destination for international markets to understand. But the fact that the country maintains a cultural "authenticity" with its wide range of historic and natural attractions could hold great allure for the outside world.

With this in view, Albania has turned its focus to tourism development. In the process, the quality of life of a significant number of Albanians could be improved -- in tune with the country’s commitment to the Millennium Development Goals.

Here and elsewhere, culture and environment can be important parts of the tourism industry, and a boon to rural communities. IPS examines this approach -- and to what extent it finds success -- using Albania as a case study in a globalised world.

Unknown Albania - Download PDF File
Wikipedia - Albania
Seminar for journalists in Albania and the region
News in RSS
SMALL-SCALE TOURISM YIELDS LARGE-SCALE BENEFITS
by Gülden Türköz Cosslett
JANUARY 2008 (IPS) - Innovative national leaders and forward-looking planners from around the world have proven that tourism that features authentic culture, nature, and experiences creates more opportunities in local communities than any other type of tourism, writes Gülden Türköz Cosslett, UN Coordinator and UN Development Programme (UNDP) Resident Representative in Albania.
more >>

UNDP-Albania
Ministry of Tourism
Albanian Tourist Guide
Albanian Institute of Tourism and Environmental Development
Institute of Statistics
Council of Europe-Albania
European Commission Delegation
Open Society Foundation for Albania
World Tourism Organisation

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IPS gratefully acknowledges United Nations Development Programme support for the IPS programme of work in 2007 on Eco-Tourism.