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Geopolitical Location in Tourism – Dr Yasam Ayavefe

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Tourism logically attracts a large number of researchers because of its scale and the diversity of the sectors it affects.

Economists, anthropologists, sociologists, doctors, urban planners, geographers, etc. they all study tourism with their own scientific approach. Therefore, in this article, we will consider tourism and geopolitical locations.

This is a topic that has been discussed and debated many times before. Taking into account the conflicting representations that the actors of the situation under study have, the power or influence on the regions and therefore the populations located there is studied.

Although tourism is a global phenomenon, this activity can be the subject of specific and contradictory development projects.

The fact that it concerns certain places remains unchanged, the interests of some may not necessarily meet those of others.

Additionally, many of us are tourists at different times for a few days or weeks, usually for a limited time, and most of us have some experience in the field.

Everyone has a way of traveling and being a tourist. For this reason, everyone represents the touristic development of the places they discover according to their age, social level, cultural and economic environment. Representations of tourism experts are also added to this.

Geography is a necessary knowledge for the analysis of tourism. These have been and continue to be motivation, one of the main sources of travel. It is geographers who best explain and explain them.

It is at the center of the approach, combining the knowledge and geopolitical approach of geographers.

Finally, if tourism is a global phenomenon, although tourism is developing in developing countries, it is a sector that primarily affects developed countries. Let’s remember that tourists overwhelmingly travel within their own country.

For example, out of 80% of French travelers in France, only 11% go abroad, and

the vast majority of them go to Spain and Italy.

Geopolitical Impact

Let’s look at the importance of representations in perceiving the effects of tourism on a region. Tourism has two completely opposite representations.

Some see tourism as an effective development tool, regardless of the places involved, with the positive effects far outweighing the negative aspects.

800 million tourists, the first sector of economic activity, provides hundreds of thousands of jobs.

Others, on the other hand, insist on the effects that they consider, above all, negative from this activity.

It is a development that benefits only a few, at the expense of the majority of the population in which the lifestyle and environment can live.

It will be destabilized by this brutal intervention represented by tourists.

Next, we condemn the acculturation of the local population as its victims, and the price increase that tourist purchases inevitably bring.

These two representations are particularly prominent in the analysis of the effects of tourism on Southern countries.

However, this very negative representation may be responsible for destroying the authenticity of their lifestyle or, worse, forcing populations to commit a fraud.

Intellectual circles exposing the evils of capitalist globalization in Southern societies are essentially current.

Or, on the contrary, we condemn the ban on developing such sites to preserve the natural environment, to preserve the flora and fauna that tourists admire and photograph.

In both cases, it arrives at the same thing, namely the profit interest that precedes respect for the local population, and is also reprimanded for tourists for supposed authenticity. Undoubtedly, this mass phenomenon has negative effects like any other process.

However, this criticism reveals a certain regret for the time that only those who know how to travel to these distant lands, that is, well-off and cultured people, even those who have worked in the field and do some research from time to time, go.

The exclusivity of long-distance travel is a thing of the past. Moreover, the question of originality is not so simple. Does it decide what is original and by what criteria?

And the question of preserving authenticity necessarily raises the question of identity. However, identity is not a static, abstract situation.

On the other hand, the massive influx of tourists leads to sometimes drastic changes in the way of being and behavior of local peoples.

However, the critical look at this evolution is the view of those who regret the disappearance of a previous situation.

Find out more about Dr. Ayavefe and his work here:

https://yasamayavefe.com/

Milaya Capital

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2023 Elections: Report, Experts Find Early Campaign Stage Less Issue Focused

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…want infractions of code of conduct for election campaign to be penalised

The Center for Research on Development of African Media, Governance and Society (CEREDEMS-Africa) and Positive Agenda Nigeria (PAN) report on the 2023 presidential election campaign monitoring indicated that the talking points of political actors are still largely not issue-based.

The organisations presented the summary of their findings at the weekly report discussion held online to disseminate the outcome of their monitoring of political actors and supporters between 28th September to 2nd October, 2022.

The report titled: “Intensive Information Pollution, Personality Disparagement or Informed Policy Engagement in Nigeria 2023 Presidential Election Campaign?” is the first weekly report of its 54-week project focused on presidential election campaign monitoring.

While presenting the report, the Director of the project’s Communication and Public Engagement, Jamiu Folarin said the report contains the findings of the research conducted by the CEREDEMS-PAN on the presidential election campaign in Nigeria. 

“For a campaign ecosystem expected to be dominated by issue-based engagements, the dominance of non-campaign and policy issues across parties’ outings in the first week revealed a campaign that did not focus on issues that matter.”

“Analysis indicates that for the first one week of campaign, issues that could not be categorized as any of the core issues of policy and campaigns had the highest percentage among the issues raised in the one-week old campaign atmosphere standing at 65.30% while Economy (10.64%) Security (7.33%) and Education (5.13%)  came distant second, third and fourth respectively on the scale of issues of priority among the contending parties.”

The report observed that across the party lines for the first week of campaigning, the campaign strategies were aimed at focusing on emphasizing what the parties and their candidates could do if elected into the office.

“Of the three major campaign strategies, our analysis revealed that ‘acclaims’ was majorly employed by actors across the party lines. The category, which depicted the use of messages that indicated that parties and candidates were best to win the presidency through sound personality traits, leadership qualities and competencies, accounted for 78.88% of the strategies used in the first week of the campaign. 

“This was followed by a paltry 19.12% of ‘attacks’ which were messages that denigrated the personality traits of candidates and leadership qualities and/or competencies of the candidates to govern the country. 

“This was trailed by 1.99% of ‘defenses’ – the messages that refuted negative elements pushed out by actors against other candidates and political parties.”

“The Labour Party was observed to have used the attacks, acclaims and defenses on almost the same scale. 

“However, the People’s Democratic Party appeared to have used defenses among the parties the most, recording a 40.00% deployment of defenses while using acclaims and attacks at 26.33% and 20.00% respectively. 

“The APC, in its approach, employed the least of acclaims and was at par with the LP in the deployment of defenses using 30.00% of its campaign messages to defend its candidate.

“Parties and their supporters used attacks mostly on Twitter (47.22%) followed by newspapers (41.67%) and Facebook (11.1%). Defenses were used equally on both twitter and in the newspapers. This appearance of attacks strategies is more intriguing as the medium is expected to have strong gatekeeping mechanism.  

“While AAC adopted the acclaims (12.37%) and attacks (2.22%) strategies respectively, it did not employ defenses at all. The NNPP (4.74%) and the YPP (0.26%) used acclaims only.”

While discussing the findings of the report at an online event, Dr Rasaq Adisa of the University of Ilorin attributed the low level of policy engagement and strategies to a number of factors.

These factors, according to Dr Adisa, include the fact that the political actors are just gaining momentum as campaign activities was lifted few days ago.

Dr Adisa also noted that the intra-party crisis and legal tussle in some political parties as well as the decision of some of the political parties to delay the flag-off of their campaign as responsible for the results of the findings.

Personality Disparagement in Campaign Messages

The report also noted that the 2023 presidential election campaign atmosphere is largely calm in the first week of campaign as “our analysts observed that the level of personality disparagement was not highly intensive. 

“None of the 130 campaign messages analyzed had a trace of personality disparagement that could be classified as highly intensive. However, there were traces of personality attack that were moderately intensive and slightly intensive.

“Largely, our analysts noted that the campaign atmosphere for the first week of campaign could be described as low in personality disparagement as about 50.00% of the campaign messages contained non-intensive personality attacks.

Information Pollution

The report noted that during elections, “clear and accurate information is critical for informed decision making by the electorate which informed interest in examining the information pollution ecosystem as the campaigns began.

“In the six entries analyzed for the first week, our analysts observed the presence of information pollution manifesting in the ecosystem with half of the data reflecting conflicting identities and construction of newsmakers and sources. 

“Similarly, other categories of misinformation also reflected in minimal presence of inaccurate photos and photo caption.

CEREDEMS-Africa/PAN Verdict on findings

While CEREDEMS-Africa/PAN commended political actors for less heated campaign atmosphere, during the period under review, ‘acclaims’ “as a campaign strategy, dominated the first one week of campaign across political parties: the report want the effort to be sustained.

“However, that elements of attacks were highly present in messages on Twitter, Facebook and even with some traces in the newspapers is a source of concern. 

“If it could be explained that Twitter and Facebook operate in an unregulated space, what of the newspapers that are expected to have strong gatekeeping mechanism?”

Experts want infractions of code of conduct for election campaign to be penalised

Meanwhile, experts have called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), security agencies and the judiciary to be deliberate in ensuring that the violations of the code of conduct for election campaigns is penalised.

Dr Rasaq Adisa of the University of Ilorin and political editor of The Nation newspaper, Dr Emmanual Oladesu made this call while discussing the outcome of the first week report of CEREDEMS-Africa and PAN on the monitoring of the 2023 presidential election campaign.

The discussion was anchored under the topic: “Political Actors and Their Campaign Trajectories: Towards Informed Choice During Presidential Election”.

The experts said the electoral act has clearly specified what constitutes these violations and any infractions must be punished to serve as a deterrent. 

“Election offenders must be brought to book, apprehended and prosecuted by security agencies because we have seen violations and our law should not only be on paper”, Dr Oladesu remarked.

Dr Adisa also wants the professional journalist and the mainstream media to keep alive their gatekeeping role by not allowing polluted messages to have its way as experienced on social media.

Dr Oladesu asked the media to stick to the ethics of the profession by being objective, balanced, fair and honest in the discharge of their duty.

They called for caution in the use of social media to spread toxic political campaigns asking social media platforms to do more to sanitiser the digital public sphere.

The experts also asked CEREDEMS-Africa and PAN to collaborate with other civil society and media organisations to disseminate the outcome of its research and set an agenda for the political actors and other stakeholders in the electoral process. 

In their remarks, the Executive Director of CEREDEMS-Africa, Dr Mustapha Muhammad Jamiu and the team lead of PAN, Dr Rasheed Adebiyi said the organisations is committed to ensuring they continue to contribute to expanding the political space and serene campaign atmosphere through its various projects.

The organisations promised to remain consistent in the six months project in using their participatory research approach to monitor the 2023 general elections campaigns by political parties, candidates and their supporters. 

The Research on Development of African Media, Governance, and Society (CEREDEMS-Africa) is a non-governmental organisation and research institute established in 2020, which focuses on using cutting-edge multi-disciplinary research methods to generate insights that improve policy initiative and implementation with regards to improving media ecosystem, governmental and societal institutions.

Positive Agenda Nigeria (PAN) is a non-governmental organisation led by a group of academics and independent researchers dedicated to adopting evidence-based approaches to strengthen good governance and democratic culture in Nigeria. 

Last Date to Join the Current Tekedia Mini-MBA is Saturday, Oct 8

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Tekedia Mini-MBA has since started. If you plan to join us in this current edition, Saturday, Oct 8th is the last day to register. After that day, we will close the registration. Tekedia Mini-MBA is the 2021 winner of Mhagic Velocity $60,000 Prize for “innovation on professional and continuing business education”. We have close to 300 faculty members and learners come from 41 countries. Begin your registration here 

Tekedia Institute offers Tekedia Mini-MBA, an innovation management 12-week program, optimized for business execution and growth, with digital operational overlay. It runs 100% online. The theme is Innovation, Growth & Digital Execution – Techniques for Building Category-King Companies. All contents are self-paced, recorded and archived which means participants do not have to be at any scheduled time to consume contents. Besides, programs are designed for ALL sectors, from fintech to construction, healthcare to manufacturing, agriculture to real estate, etc.

Apple to Switch to USB-C Charger As EU Parliament Agrees to Implement Reform

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The European Parliament on Tuesday voted to confirm the agreement the European Union had earlier, mandating the use of USB-C chargers for devices, including phones, tablets and cameras by 2024.

The reform was passed by an overwhelming majority in the European Parliament, with 602 votes in favor and only 13 against. It marks the first of such attempts anywhere in the world, spotlighting the EU as a pacesetter in tech industry reforms.

This means that many mobile device makers, including Apple, will have to shift to the USB-C port. The iPhone maker had warned earlier that the EU’s reform will stifle innovation and result in so much waste, while the bloc said it’s essential to implement the reform now to curb growing tech waste.

Apple, Samsung and Huawei will have to change their mobile device charging ports to USB-C before 2024 in Europe to comply with the rules.

Apple will be the hardest hit by the change. The American tech giant has for years built customized brands of devices that don’t share accessories with non-Apple devices.

Ben Wood, chief analyst at CCS Insight, said the vote made it “inevitable” that the iPhone 15, expected in 2023, will have a USB-C port.

“This is a victory for common sense. Although Apple has a huge installed base of lightning cable-powered devices, the ubiquity of USB-C across all consumer electronics products means that harmonizing on USB-C makes perfect sense,” he said.

Device manufacturers are likely going to implement the USB-C for their global supply, as delivering the single port only for Europe will mean making double ports for a single device model.

“Irrespective of whether the UK government mandates the move to USB-C or not, UK consumers will get the technology by default. It will make no sense for consumer electronics manufacturers to offer devices with anything else,” Wood said.

The new rules also apply to laptops from 2026, which gives manufacturers more time to adapt, although many already use USB-C.

Alex Agius Saliba, the EU lawmaker who pioneered the reform through the EU assembly, said under the reform, mobile devices sold after autumn 2024 will have to be compatible with the single charger. He explained that old chargers will not be outlawed so that customers can continue to use older models.

In total, 13 categories of electronic devices are expected to adapt to the reform by 2024.

The reform is expected to lead to a gradual phase-out of older products. Saliba told a news conference that outlawing old chargers would have had a disproportionate impact on consumers.

The reform, which had been discussed for years, was prompted by complaints from iPhone and Android users about having to switch to different chargers for their devices.

In addition to the waste it generates, the EU Commission said multiple ports cost consumers a fortune. The Commission has estimated that a single charger would save about €250m ($247.3 million) for consumers.

Some of the device makers are already working to meet the reform deadline. Bloomberg reported in May that Apple is working on an iPhone with a USB-C charging port that could debut next year.

Following the vote on Tuesday, shares in European semiconductor manufacturers, including those of Apple suppliers STMicro and Infineon, jumped.

Bienvenue! Time for Logistics in Business Operations at Tekedia Institute

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Salutations. Je suis Ndubuisi. Je suis un homme d’affaire. Faisons des affaires.  Yes, I am learning French. I see it as an important language for pan-African business in Africa. I am using Duolingo which is super-amazing.

Tomorrow (Thursday) at Tekedia Mini-MBA, we will learn why language can provide competitive advantages. Favour Chisimdi Nwobodo of Empress Linguistics Services which offers translation services will lead the session.

During NYSC, I learnt enough Hausa to help me get discounts in the market. Yes, I made sure the sellers knew I was just trying. As they smiled and laughed, discounts came. It was a very magical experience that “Ina kwana. Ina so in sayi zobo. Nawa ne shi din?” could most times give you free zobo as the seller smiled that Ajuwaya was trying. (NYSC members: memorize the NYSC handbook, speak the native language and you can get free taxis, meals, etc most times from the natives.)

Come to Tekedia Institute – and let’s discuss the power of linguistics in business. Bienvenue!