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Tourism research after the COVID-19 outbreak: Insights for more sustainable, local and smart cities

•A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 and tourism development.•Evaluation of 1303 articles between 1 December 2019 to 31 March 2021.•The co-citation analysis reveals the most promising clusters, subtopics and outlets.•The article identifies the challenges of future tourism managers an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sustainable cities and society 2021-10, Vol.73, p.103126-103126, Article 103126
Main Authors: Casado-Aranda, Luis-Alberto, Sánchez-Fernández, Juan, Bastidas-Manzano, Ana-Belén
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•A bibliometric analysis of publications on COVID-19 and tourism development.•Evaluation of 1303 articles between 1 December 2019 to 31 March 2021.•The co-citation analysis reveals the most promising clusters, subtopics and outlets.•The article identifies the challenges of future tourism managers and city planners.•It reflects the greater importance of a more sustainable, smart and technological cities management. This paper presents the results of a bibliometric analysis of academic research dealing with COVID-19 in the area of city destination development from 1 December 2019 to 31 March 2021. Particularly, by means of SciMAT software, it identifies, quantifies, and visually displays the main research clusters, thematic structure and emerging trends that city and tourism planners will face in the new normal. The search revealed that social media and smart tourism are the themes with the greatest potential; sustainable cities, local destination development, changes in tourist behavior, and tourists’ risk perception are underdeveloped streams with enormous relevance and growth in the new normal. Research on the effects of COVID-19 on citizen health and its economic impact on the tourism industry and cities are intersectional and highly developed topics, although of little relevance. The current study also identifies the challenges of destination research for planners and proposes future research directions. Consequently, this paper contributes to the existing literature on COVID-19 and sustainable cities, as it develops a critical examination of the extant research and points out the research gaps that must be filled by future studies.
ISSN:2210-6707
2210-6715
DOI:10.1016/j.scs.2021.103126