P. Mullins, CLASS RELATIONS AND TOURISM URBANIZATION - THE REGENERATION OF THE PETITE-BOURGEOISIE AND THE EMERGENCE OF A NEW URBAN FORM, International journal of urban and regional research, 18(4), 1994, pp. 591-608
The last few decades of the twentieth century have been a time of very
marked urban change, with one of the most striking of the new urban f
orms being tourism urbanization; an urbanization of rapidly developing
cities and towns specially built to enable large numbers of people to
visit for a short period so they can consume some of the many pleasur
able goods and services on sale. Paralleling these urban - as well as
regional, national and international - developments are changes to cla
ss relations and thus to class structures. One striking but rarely ack
nowledged class change is the recent regeneration of the petite bourge
oisie. This paper attempts to see whether a link exists between touris
m urbanization, as a late twentieth-century urban form, and this recen
t regeneration of the petite bourgeoisie. Empirically, it focuses on t
he Gold Coast, the largest centre in Australia devoted to tourism, and
the city most clearly epitomizing Australian tourism urbanization. A
comparative analysis clearly shows this city has a strong petit bourge
ois presence, this being because the industries forming this city's ec
onomy are those traditionally involving the petit bourgeois. Moreover,
the actions taken in this city by this class essentially have been at
tempts to counter factors perceived to threaten the livelihood of this
class, a response paralleling that of the rural petite bourgeoisie un
der similar development experiences.