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                            18 articles                        
                    
                Article    29 Oct 2025
    
                                    Barbara Marchetti,                             Guido Castelli and                             Francesco Corvaro                        
    
                    https://doi.org/10.54175/hsustain4040015
            
    34 Views9 Downloads
Review    17 Oct 2025
    
                                    Jesús Huerta de Soto,                             Antonio Sánchez-Bayón and                             Philipp Bagus                        
    
                            
                                    This paper reviews the efficiency and sustainability of the management model during the COVID-19 crisis and beyond. There is a comparison between the centralized bureaucratic management versus the agile market alternative or spontaneous and flexible social
                                                    
                    
                            
            
                                    This paper reviews the efficiency and sustainability of the management model during the COVID-19 crisis and beyond. There is a comparison between the centralized bureaucratic management versus the agile market alternative or spontaneous and flexible social coordination. This is a study of Political Economy, Management, and Health Economics from the perspective of Austrian economics, with special attention to the Spanish case. The analysis is based on Mises theorem about the impossibility of economic calculation under centralized coactive systems, and other economic principles. In this context, we also pay attention to collateral problems of the centralized and coactive management. Finally, we propose a solution based on dynamic efficiency and the constitutions of wellbeing economics based on digitalization.
                                
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        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 4, pp. 205–215
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 4, pp. 205–215
    299 Views48 Downloads
Article    8 Sep 2025
    
                                    Larry Dwyer                        
    
                            
                                    Across the social sciences, wellbeing measures are being developed to cover a more comprehensive picture of factors contributing to quality of life. However, ongoing neglect of the wellbeing outcomes of tourism activity has restricted the relevance
                                                    
                    
                            
            
                                    Across the social sciences, wellbeing measures are being developed to cover a more comprehensive picture of factors contributing to quality of life. However, ongoing neglect of the wellbeing outcomes of tourism activity has restricted the relevance of much tourism research, practice and policymaking globally. These include failure to recognise human wellbeing as the primary aim of any industrial development, including tourism; adherence to a superficial conception of the nature of wellbeing and its measures; a failure to acknowledge that human wellbeing, beyond “needs”, is an essential component of sustainable development; tourism stakeholder adherence to a primarily static, rather than dynamic conception of sustainability; failure to distinguish between “weak” and “strong” sustainability; uncritical adoption of a pro-growth mindset that is steadily depleting and degrading the resources and the wellbeing of life on the planet; failure to incorporate wellbeing outcomes into tourism business mission statements; and failure to treat seriously the need for tourism degrowth at least for some sectors of the industry. To address such failures, tourism decisionmakers must incorporate stakeholder wellbeing outcomes into conceptual analysis, empirical research and policy assessment.
                                
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        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 3, pp. 192–204
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 3, pp. 192–204
    485 Views121 Downloads
Article    1 Feb 2025
    
                                    Bogusław Ślusarczyk,                             Małgorzata A. Kozłowska and                             Zuzanna A. Kozłowska                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 1, pp. 16–37
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 1, pp. 16–37
    1531 Views307 Downloads
Article    15 Jan 2025
    
                                    Michael Tarrant,                             Mikell Gleason,                             Steven Boyd and                             Tony Wellington                        
    
                            
                                    We adopt a normative model of crowd tolerance (expressed as a willingness to support more or fewer tourists) as a proxy for overtourism. Consistent with Social Exchange Theory, it is proposed that a person will perceive
                                                    
                    
                            
            
                                    We adopt a normative model of crowd tolerance (expressed as a willingness to support more or fewer tourists) as a proxy for overtourism. Consistent with Social Exchange Theory, it is proposed that a person will perceive the impacts of tourism at a destination as positive or negative depending on the extent to which they view visitor levels as under or over a threshold that they expect or support (i.e., their norms or tolerance level). A total of 420 residents and 1048 visitors completed a survey interview in the tourist shire of Noosa between 2022 and 2024. Results show that residents and visitors differed significantly on many of the perceived tourism impacts, with long-term residents less favorable to the positive impacts than visitors. There was broad consensus across both residents and tourists, and the highest level of agreement, with negative impacts (especially that tourism contributes to traffic and parking congestion, and higher prices). The lowest levels of agreement with positive tourism impacts were found for “over tourists” (respondents who supported a fewer number of tourists). Implications for sustainable destination management are discussed in the context of the Quadruple Bottom Line, including efforts that enable tourism communities to grow well using a guardianship ethos and collective action of Gifts and Gains.
                                
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        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 1, pp. 1–15
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 1, pp. 1–15
    1913 Views591 Downloads2 Citations
Article    24 Jun 2024
    
                                    Vesela Veleva,                             Svetlana Todorova,                             Kevin Bleau,                             Joy Mohr and                             Rob Vandenabeele                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 3, pp. 275–293
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 3, pp. 275–293
    3399 Views2721 Downloads1 Citations
Article    28 Apr 2024
    
                                    Hala Aburas                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 163–183
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 163–183
    2149 Views406 Downloads1 Citations
Review    18 Apr 2024
    
                                    Md Tasbirul Islam,                             Usha Iyer-Raniga and                             Amjad Ali                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 129–162
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 129–162
    6109 Views893 Downloads4 Citations
Article    27 Mar 2024
    
                                    Hannes Antonschmidt                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 116–128
Volume 3 (2024), Issue 2, pp. 116–128
    2056 Views605 Downloads
Article    21 Jul 2023
    
                                    Nikolaos Partarakis,                             Effrosini Karouzaki,                             Stavroula Ntoa,                             Anastasia Ntagianta,                             Emmanouil Zidianakis and                             Constantine Stephanidis                        
    
        Highlights of Sustainability
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 3, pp. 138–156
Volume 2 (2023), Issue 3, pp. 138–156
    3569 Views889 Downloads
Volume 4 (2025), Issue 4, pp. 240–255