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Research

 

As an interdisciplinary scholar, Kelsey draws on literature from anthropology, geography, recreation, tourism and leisure studies, and therapeutic recreation professional practice to inform the development and practice of her diverse research projects and scholarship.

 

Predominately a qualitative and ethnographic researcher, Kelsey is a pragmatic researcher, adept at mixed methods work, including quantitative research and statistical analysis. Kelsey has presented her research at International Conferences in: Guelph, Ottawa, Quebec City, and Vancouver, Canada; Tampa, USA; Stockholm, Sweden; and Evora, Portugal.

 

Kelsey seeks to contribute to both the theory and practice of recreation, tourism and leisure, academically and within the communities in which she conducts her research.  As such, her research is both theoretical and applied in nature; it focuses on the areas of (contested) tourism narratives produced by and for tourists, the role of interpretation in silencing and giving voice to those narratives, the nature of host and guest interactions, and their phenomenological experiences of tourism. Specifically, Kelsey's research in these areas touch on Battlefield Tourism, Agricultural Tourism, and Volunteer Tourism.

Kelsey has also worked in rural community tourism development in the Great Lakes region of Canada, leading to the development of an applied research agenda that explores trail-based recreation and trail tourism development (including converted rail trails, cycle trails, multi-use/ multi-season trails) as a driver for economic growth in rural Canada, and the intersection of trail development initiatives with indigenous culture and land claims, and private stewardship. Her work also aims to overcome the challenges to rural economic development in areas where the economy has historically been contingent on natural resource extraction industries and the implication of this and traditional consumptive rural recreational land-use practices for the development of new non-consumptive tourism economies. Kelsey's applied trails research also explores the implications of social enterprise for trail organization governance and the development and maintenance of trails as community assets. This practical trail-based recreation and trail tourism development work has related theoretical implications, centered on the intersection of rural and indigenous culture, history and knowledge and rural community tourism development, as well as theorizing the application of social enterprise models to the non-profit sector. 

Kelsey's future research plans include explorations of a) the intersection of wellness, and well being, with sustainability in rural and remote tourism experiences and on trails, b) therapeutic recreation, self-care and training for  in-service students and recently certified Therapeutic Recreationists, c) the meaning and experience of cultural heritage festivals, and d) recreation and tourism in dark sky preserves.

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Kelsey Johansen 

University of Otago Library
Dunedin, New Zealand

© 2016 Ann Haines

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© 2019 Kelsey M Johansen

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