Handbook of Accessible Tourism
Nigel Halpern is Professor of Air Transport and Tourism Management at Kristiania University of Applied Sciences in Norway. His main interests are in accessibility, digital transformation, and marketing. Regarding accessibility, his research has focused on information and communications for accessible tourism, institutional frameworks for accessible tourism, technology-based experiences in accessible tourism, and lived experiences of travelling with guide dogs. Prior to joining academia, he held various positions in adventure tourism, hospitality, transport policy, and the regulation of civil aviation.
Jillian M. Rickly is a Professor of Tourism at the University of Nottingham. She is a tourism geographer with research interests in authenticity/alienation, mobilities, accessibility, and more-than-human relations. Her work has been published widely across the Annals of Tourism Research, Tourism Management, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, Tourist Studies, Cultural Geographies, and Mobilities, as well as in numerous edited volumes.
Brian Garrod is Professor of Marketing at Swansea University. He is founding editor of the Journal of Destination Marketing & Management and is a member of the editorial boards of several other prominent journals. He has published eight textbooks, including "Managing Visiting Attractions", now in its third edition. He has worked as a consultant to the World Tourism Organization and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Marcus Hansen is a senior lecturer in tourism and events at Liverpool John Moores University. He is the director of the Liverpool Centre for Olympic Research on Inclusion. Marcus teaches and conducts research in relation to tourism and events management. His research interests are particularly around the topics of accessible tourism. Marcus has published widely, including in key tourism journals such as Tourism Management and Annals of Tourism Research. Marcus also hosts the Accessible Tourism Podcast, in which he talks to disabled people and people from industry. Through his research, Marcus continues to work with various organisations, nationally and internationally, in an effort to make tourism more accessible to disabled people.