{"title":"Tourism Development in the Borderlands of Romania: A Case Study of the Danube Gorge–Iron Gates","authors":"Andrei-Florin Băbăț, Sorin Pavel","doi":"10.14746/quageo-2022-0037","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Border areas are a real challenge for tourism development. Usually associated with the periphery from a socio-economic point of view, these areas often have natural potential and attractive landscapes that have been little transformed by human activity and numerous historical and cultural tourist attractions. Although these areas have considerable tourism potential, this is not sufficient for the sustainable development of tourism and the exploitation of this potential is strongly influenced by the degree of permeability of the border. This is the case of the Romanian-Serbian border, which overlaps the most spectacular sector of the Danube – the Iron Gates Gorge. The main aim of this article is to analyse the role of tourism in the development of border areas and how it functions in a particular territorial context: the Danube Gorge located at the border between Romania and Serbia. The Romanian-Serbian border currently functions as an external border of the European Union in a favourable historical and political context, given the tradition of good neighbourliness between the two entities, the states located on either side of the Danube. However, the communist period altered the prospects for tourism development in this region through a very drastic and controlled border regime, even though the area benefited from major investment projects, such as the dam and hydroelectric power station at Porțile de Fier, built in the 1970s in cooperation with the former Yugoslavia. An analysis of the statistical data on tourism development shows that tourist traffic is on the increase, although there is a contradiction between the upward trend in tourist flows and the backwardness of large-scale tourist infrastructure, with the dominant type of accommodation being small, flexible, and rural accommodation that does not require large investments. The results presented in this article can be summarised in the general conclusion that the development of tourism in the Danube Gorge–Iron Gates remains dependent on the political factor and the border regime, even though the region has a remarkable tourism potential.","PeriodicalId":46433,"journal":{"name":"Quaestiones Geographicae","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Quaestiones Geographicae","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14746/quageo-2022-0037","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract Border areas are a real challenge for tourism development. Usually associated with the periphery from a socio-economic point of view, these areas often have natural potential and attractive landscapes that have been little transformed by human activity and numerous historical and cultural tourist attractions. Although these areas have considerable tourism potential, this is not sufficient for the sustainable development of tourism and the exploitation of this potential is strongly influenced by the degree of permeability of the border. This is the case of the Romanian-Serbian border, which overlaps the most spectacular sector of the Danube – the Iron Gates Gorge. The main aim of this article is to analyse the role of tourism in the development of border areas and how it functions in a particular territorial context: the Danube Gorge located at the border between Romania and Serbia. The Romanian-Serbian border currently functions as an external border of the European Union in a favourable historical and political context, given the tradition of good neighbourliness between the two entities, the states located on either side of the Danube. However, the communist period altered the prospects for tourism development in this region through a very drastic and controlled border regime, even though the area benefited from major investment projects, such as the dam and hydroelectric power station at Porțile de Fier, built in the 1970s in cooperation with the former Yugoslavia. An analysis of the statistical data on tourism development shows that tourist traffic is on the increase, although there is a contradiction between the upward trend in tourist flows and the backwardness of large-scale tourist infrastructure, with the dominant type of accommodation being small, flexible, and rural accommodation that does not require large investments. The results presented in this article can be summarised in the general conclusion that the development of tourism in the Danube Gorge–Iron Gates remains dependent on the political factor and the border regime, even though the region has a remarkable tourism potential.
边境地区是旅游业发展面临的现实挑战。从社会经济的角度来看,这些地区通常与周边地区联系在一起,这些地区通常具有自然潜力和吸引人的景观,这些景观几乎没有被人类活动和众多的历史文化旅游景点所改变。虽然这些地区具有相当大的旅游潜力,但这不足以实现旅游业的可持续发展,而且这种潜力的开发受到边界渗透程度的强烈影响。罗马尼亚和塞尔维亚的边界就是这种情况,它与多瑙河最壮观的部分——铁门峡谷重叠。本文的主要目的是分析旅游业在边境地区发展中的作用,以及它如何在特定的领土背景下发挥作用:位于罗马尼亚和塞尔维亚边境的多瑙河峡谷。鉴于位于多瑙河两岸的两个实体之间睦邻友好的传统,罗马尼亚-塞尔维亚边界目前在有利的历史和政治背景下作为欧洲联盟的外部边界。然而,共产主义时期通过非常严厉和受控制的边境制度改变了该地区旅游业发展的前景,尽管该地区受益于重大投资项目,例如1970年代与前南斯拉夫合作在Porțile de Fier建造的水坝和水力发电站。对旅游发展统计数据的分析表明,尽管旅游流量呈上升趋势与大规模旅游基础设施落后之间存在矛盾,但旅游客流量呈增长趋势,主要住宿类型为小型、灵活、投资不高的乡村住宿。本文提出的结果可以总结为一般结论,即多瑙河峡谷-铁门地区的旅游业发展仍然取决于政治因素和边境制度,尽管该地区具有显著的旅游潜力。
期刊介绍:
Quaestiones Geographicae was established in 1974 as an annual journal of the Institute of Geography, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland. Its founder and first editor was Professor Stefan Kozarski. Initially the scope of the journal covered issues in both physical and socio-economic geography; since 1982, exclusively physical geography. In 2006 there appeared the idea of a return to the original conception of the journal, although in a somewhat modified organisational form. Quaestiones Geographicae publishes research results of wide interest in the following fields: •physical geography, •economic and human geography, •spatial management and planning,