By Megan Epler Wood on Thursday, 08 April 2010
Category: Members' Blogs

Global Sustainable Ecotourism Course July 12-16, 2010

April 8, 2010 - Burlington, VT USA

Megan Epler Wood, the founder of The International Ecotourism Society (TIES), is initiating a new short-course, Global Sustainable Ecotourism Development, at the University of Vermont, July 12-16, 2010. This course is being launched in honor of the 20th anniversary of TIES. In the past 20 years, ecotourism has emerged as one of the most dynamic and discussed tools for sustainable development. In the last 10 years, the field has been enriched by a vast array of disciplines, particularly economic development and social/pro-poor development techniques. Its broad and successful application as a rural economic and sustainable development tool is based on a set of methodologies that all students and development practitioners require to be successful.

This course will look at ecotourism as a business model first and foremost, which requires a complex series of business approaches to deliver sustainable development benefits. It will review the big picture of tourism development impacts and strategies to deliver high quality, low impact results. It will teach a holistic approach to planning and tourism development that reviews governments’ and international donors’ role in rural land development, stressing bioregional planning as a key tool to move rural areas into a more thorough process for sustainable regional development. Students attending Global Sustainable Ecotourism Development will learn new, more sensitive field based approaches that rely on a broader set of academic expertise and disciplines than associated with the topic in the past. The course will help students to understand how tourism can play a broader role in sustainable development, and help transition economies away from destructive development practices

Speakers include; Bruce Poon Tip, CEO of GAP Adventures; Richard G. Edwards, Director of Planeterra Foundation; Ann Nygard, Associate Director of the National Geographic Center for Sustainable Destinations; Seleni Matus, Director of the Belize Tourism Board and former Ecotourism Manager for Conservation International; and Erika Harms, Executive Director of the Tourism Sustainability Council and Senior Advisor at the United Nations Foundation. This 5 day intensive seminar will be held on the University of Vermont campus as a professional certificate program, or for three college credits.

All information on the course can be found on the University of Vermont website at http://learn.uvm.edu/ecotourism. Accommodations on campus can be acquired in a Leed certified facility for a modest fee. Off campus housing also includes “green housing” options.

The State of Vermont supplies a vibrant location for students from around the world to see how sustainability practices can transform an economy and create a sustainable destination that is based on a wide range of sustainability practices. In 2009, Vermont was rated as the 6th most sustainable destination in the world by National Geographic Traveler magazine.

Burlington, Vermont’s largest city (with just 40,000 residents) and home to the University of Vermont, is at the center of the sustainable development movement in the state. The city has won many awards for being one of the most healthy and livable cities in America and was also rated as one of the top adventure towns by National Geographic Adventure. Field trip opportunities will be available to learn more about Vermont’s well-known sustainable agriculture movement, recently featured on the Discovery Channel’s Emeril Green Program. For more details on Burlington’s global reputation for corporate sustainability practices, see the full press release.

Megan Epler Wood founded The International Ecotourism Society (TIES) in 1990, the oldest and largest non-profit organization in the world dedicated to making ecotourism a tool for sustainable tourism development worldwide. She was President & CEO from 1991-2002. Since 2003, Megan’s firm EplerWood International has devoted itself to aiding some of the poorest countries in the world with sustainable tourism development; including the nations of Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Sierra Leone, Mexico, El Salvador, Brazil, and Honduras. Her published works includes; Ecotourism: Principles, Practices and Policies for Sustainability for UNEP in 2002. She has lectured at Columbia Business School, Harvard University, Wellesley, Duke University, University of Vermont, and The George Washington University. She was named a Senior Fellow at the Institute at the Golden Gate in 2010 where she is developing next generation thinking on the development of tourism as a sustainable economic development tool in collaboration with leading universities, NGOs, and business professionals. For more information contact: University of Vermont, Continuing Education, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., 802-656-3131

Leave Comments