’The destination is central to the study of tourism but it is easy for the concept to become a somewhat simplistic territorial one overly infused by analysis of economics, marketing and strategy. This book digs far deeper into the intellectual roots of the destination. It spends adequate critical time grappling with meaning; it provides rich illustration through case studies and offers new insights into the re-orientation of destination studies.’ John Tribe, University of Surrey, UK ’If tourism’s formative power in the making of societies is acknowledged, few contributions take this point as comprehensively into social science as this impressive volume edited by Viken and GranÃ¥s. Through critical thinking and theoretically informative case studies, readers are taken aboard reflexive and situated investigations of the plural and multiple ways in which tourist destinations develop.’ Jørgen Ole Bærenholdt, Roskilde University, Denmark