Limits of Sustainability in Archaeological Tourism: An Exercise on the United Arab Emirates
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Sociocultural Impacts
3.2. Socioeconomic Restrictions
3.3. Conservation
3.4. Authenticity
4. Discussion
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- Perceived market overlaps due to the impression of repetitiveness and lack of uniqueness are incompatible with successful tourism integration. Many archaeological sites may appear as offering equivalent experiences; hence, their attractiveness becomes reduced in what is an already saturated market. This can partly be ascribed to inadequate interpretive branding strategies, given the intrinsic uniqueness of all single sites. Ways forward can include differentiated visitor segmentation and more personalized forms of communication such as digital interactivity or storytelling.
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- Return on investment (ROI) for private stakeholders, once public monies might have ensured basic functions such as research and conservation, poses a second major challenge. The economic viability of touristified sites is indeed a serious entrepreneurial challenge as downstream efforts by hospitality and tour operators seek to prioritize ROI in a non-intensive sector that, however, depends on high investment and permanent labor costs. Critical production factors, namely the academic and other public requirements of archaeological resources, cannot be controlled by private investors who are necessarily reduced to freeriders and therefore tend to prefer more vertically articulated investments.
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- Geographical constraints represent logical impediments to developing archaeological site tourism. Most identified sites in the UAE are located not in the proximity of urban tourism hubs but instead in remote areas where their appeal is brandable but their visitability is marginal. The cost for private or even public players to invest in isolated sites based exclusively on archaeological tangibles is a deterrent in itself, especially as very few sites yield any monumentality, in which case there is no need for radical location-specific authenticity. If there is high tourism potential, transportation networks can be optimized to gain site access in a reasonably tourist-friendly manner, or virtual alternatives may be deployed for non-visitable sites. Inter-emirate planning is also an option for integrated archaeological itineraries.
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- Lastly, the physical nature and condition of the archaeological site remains a primary element of tourism interest. Underwhelming structures and physical surroundings can be of major importance to the advancement of archaeological research but will fail to impress visitors, who carry preconceptions about the impactful nature of sites. Tour operators have little interest in adding predictably disappointing elements to their products. Ways forward can consider AI-based interactive solutions and multilingual storytelling, in addition to a selective strategic undertaking where only a few selected sites are to be developed for conventional tourism.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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De Man, A. Limits of Sustainability in Archaeological Tourism: An Exercise on the United Arab Emirates. Tour. Hosp. 2025, 6, 160. https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040160
De Man A. Limits of Sustainability in Archaeological Tourism: An Exercise on the United Arab Emirates. Tourism and Hospitality. 2025; 6(4):160. https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040160
Chicago/Turabian StyleDe Man, Adriaan. 2025. "Limits of Sustainability in Archaeological Tourism: An Exercise on the United Arab Emirates" Tourism and Hospitality 6, no. 4: 160. https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040160
APA StyleDe Man, A. (2025). Limits of Sustainability in Archaeological Tourism: An Exercise on the United Arab Emirates. Tourism and Hospitality, 6(4), 160. https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040160