Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Angkor' has mentioned 'Tourism' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Contents 1 Historical overview 1.1 Seat of the Khmer Empire 1.2 Construction of Angkor Wat 1.3 Jayavarman VII 1.4 Zhou Daguan 1.5 End of the Angkorian period 1.5.1 War with the Ayutthaya Kingdom 1.5.2 Erosion of the state religion 1.5.3 Neglect of public works 1.5.4 Natural disaster 1.6 Restoration, preservation, and threats 1.6.1 Water-table dropping 1.6.2 Looting 1.6.3 Unsustainable tourism 1.6.4 COVID-19 2 Religious history 2.1 Pre-Angkorian religion 2.2 Shiva and the lingam 2.3 Vaishnavism 2.4 Mahayana Buddhism 2.5 Hindu restoration 2.6 Religious pluralism 2.7 Theravada Buddhism 3 Archaeological sites 4 Terms and phrases 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External links | WIKI |
International tourism to Angkor has increased significantly in recent years, with visitor numbers reaching around 2 million a year by 2014;[35] this poses additional conservation problems but has also provided financial assistance to the restoration effort. | WIKI |
With the increased growth in tourism at Angkor, new hotels and restaurants are being built to accommodate such growth. | WIKI |
Unsustainable tourism[edit] | WIKI |
This direct pressure created by unchecked tourism is expected to cause significant damage to the monuments in the future. | WIKI |
In sites such as Angkor, tourism is inevitable. | WIKI |
Western tourism to Angkor began in the 1970s. | WIKI |
[41] The sandstone monuments and Angkor are not made for this type of heightened tourism. | WIKI |
Part of this movement to limit the impacts of tourism has been to only open certain areas of the site. | WIKI |
Tourism is a vital part to the Cambodian economy, and shutting down parts of Angkor, the largest tourist destination in the country, is not an option. | WIKI |
endogenous: exerted by more than 100,000 inhabitants distributed over 112 historic settlements scattered over the site, who constantly try to expand their dwelling areas; exogenous: related to the proximity of the town of Siem Reap, the seat of the province and a tourism hub. | UNESCO |
Tourism represents an enormous economic potential but it can also generate irreparable destructions of the tangible as well as intangible cultural heritage. | UNESCO |
The AMP helps the APSARA National Authority to reorganize and strengthen the institutional aspects, and the CDPP prepares the land use map with an experimental participation of the communities and supports small projects related to tourist development in order to improve the income of villagers living in the protected zones; The Heritage Management Framework composed of a Tourism Management Plan and a Risk map on monuments and natural resources; a multilateral cooperation with the Government of Australia and UNESCO. | UNESCO |