Foresight
Accelerated Displacement
Climate change, conflict, resource shortages, inequality and political elites unable…
Read moreTitle: Rise of Nimby
Author: Future Agenda | https://www.futureagenda.org
Permalink:
https://www.futureagenda.org/foresights/rise-of-nimby
Globalisation of trade and travel, with geopolitical shifts from North to South and from West to East, have delivered many benefits for some – but are causing clashes of cultures and a perspective of political retrenchment for others.
Through globalization, the world has opened for many. Whether travelling, trading or just taking an interest, the world today really is your oyster, not least because of the window of opportunities that the Internet provides and enables. However, nativism, protectionism, isolationist thinking and its ilk is featuring in many more ways than in political rhetoric. Even in the seemingly innocuous area of tourism.
In a more accessible, ‘smaller’ world, travellers can go anywhere, see anything, buy anything and through the help of peers and more, seek an enormously personal experience at the same time. However, locals are fed up with visitors running roughshod over their communities, and the sheer volume of people. In Amsterdam, residents are concerned over its tourist crush in central areas and with it, ‘beer bikes’ and the dreaded sound of ‘trolley terror’ (aka suitcases lugged over cobblestone streets). City leaders here are doing their best to devise ways to spread the increasing number of tourists – and their spending – over a wider footprint in the city. Similarly, Luigi Brugnaro, Mayor of Venice, says that his city of 270,000 cannot cope with the 21m visitors that they receive annually, and is taking steps to pare back the onslaught, and is considering priority lanes for locals on the city vaporettos (ferries).
Another concern is the rise in those seeking more authentic, local experiences, driven in part by house swaps, and the collaborative economies in the travel community. Barcelona’s leaders are seeking to increase its visitor numbers from 7.5m to 10m per year, and are feeling the heat as locals begin to assemble and protest, particularly in the historic and ‘authentic’ La Barceloneta district. Meanwhile a key tourist issue in Hong Kong is more specifically about loss of revenue – mainlanders buying goods in Hong Kong, only to sell them at higher prices once back on their turf.
Beyond tourism, there’s the much uglier push back; that of nativism. Having absorbed more than 1m migrants in 2015, primarily from war-torn Syria and its surrounds, Europe is now feeling real backlash. There are already demands for better border controls or the Schengen system of visa-free travel to be temporarily suspended. Or there’s the town of Randers, Denmark, which has started ‘the meatball war’ by passing a law demanding that pork be included in school lunches. Critics say that it stigmatizes Muslims and in effect, creates a problem that did not exist previously. This type of response is not unusual, given the extreme EU migration influx of the past year.
Read more27 m
annual visitors to Venice
52 %
of Americans want it to mind its own business internationally
From
The World In 2025