Evolution of Shortbreak Holidays.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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Evolution of Shortbreak Holidays. / Lohmann, Martin.

in: The Tourist Review, Jahrgang 46, Nr. 2, 01.02.1991, S. 14-23.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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Lohmann M. Evolution of Shortbreak Holidays. The Tourist Review. 1991 Feb 1;46(2):14-23. doi: 10.1108/eb058065

Bibtex

@article{48c2c10597864470a65c240201cfb765,
title = "Evolution of Shortbreak Holidays.",
abstract = "Travel Surveys in Europe: More than one problem to achieve this the results of several national tourism research projects have to be reviewed. It is known that the situation of tourism research in Europe is not satisfying, even though now almost every country has a more or less regulary travel survey. From a scientific point of view it is necessary that these surveys are valid and reliable, which is difficult to prove. Anyway it is true that this objective can only be met by a high standard of quality. Particular problems, however, may rise from comparing national surveys, and even more so when time series are involved. Lack of comparability already starts with the definitions, and the results vary with different methodological approaches. This is especially true for shortbreak holidays. Figure 1 shows the astonishing effects of minor changes in the methodological approach. For not blaming others, it's an example of our own research work. It demonstrates that a higher frequency of surveys p.a. (1985 RA/KONTI RA) or a slightly modified question (KONTI RA 85/KONTI RA 89) makes up for a higher number of shorttrips.",
keywords = "Tourism studies, Business psychology",
author = "Martin Lohmann",
year = "1991",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1108/eb058065",
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "14--23",
journal = "The Tourist Review",
issn = "0251-3102",
publisher = "Emerald Publishing Limited",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evolution of Shortbreak Holidays.

AU - Lohmann, Martin

PY - 1991/2/1

Y1 - 1991/2/1

N2 - Travel Surveys in Europe: More than one problem to achieve this the results of several national tourism research projects have to be reviewed. It is known that the situation of tourism research in Europe is not satisfying, even though now almost every country has a more or less regulary travel survey. From a scientific point of view it is necessary that these surveys are valid and reliable, which is difficult to prove. Anyway it is true that this objective can only be met by a high standard of quality. Particular problems, however, may rise from comparing national surveys, and even more so when time series are involved. Lack of comparability already starts with the definitions, and the results vary with different methodological approaches. This is especially true for shortbreak holidays. Figure 1 shows the astonishing effects of minor changes in the methodological approach. For not blaming others, it's an example of our own research work. It demonstrates that a higher frequency of surveys p.a. (1985 RA/KONTI RA) or a slightly modified question (KONTI RA 85/KONTI RA 89) makes up for a higher number of shorttrips.

AB - Travel Surveys in Europe: More than one problem to achieve this the results of several national tourism research projects have to be reviewed. It is known that the situation of tourism research in Europe is not satisfying, even though now almost every country has a more or less regulary travel survey. From a scientific point of view it is necessary that these surveys are valid and reliable, which is difficult to prove. Anyway it is true that this objective can only be met by a high standard of quality. Particular problems, however, may rise from comparing national surveys, and even more so when time series are involved. Lack of comparability already starts with the definitions, and the results vary with different methodological approaches. This is especially true for shortbreak holidays. Figure 1 shows the astonishing effects of minor changes in the methodological approach. For not blaming others, it's an example of our own research work. It demonstrates that a higher frequency of surveys p.a. (1985 RA/KONTI RA) or a slightly modified question (KONTI RA 85/KONTI RA 89) makes up for a higher number of shorttrips.

KW - Tourism studies

KW - Business psychology

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/46f77025-c0da-36b1-8bea-048ed99502a4/

U2 - 10.1108/eb058065

DO - 10.1108/eb058065

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 46

SP - 14

EP - 23

JO - The Tourist Review

JF - The Tourist Review

SN - 0251-3102

IS - 2

ER -

DOI