Tourists in Botswana Get Water, but G/wi Do Not

A travel company based in South Africa received permission on Friday from the government of Botswana to build a tourist lodge near a G/wi settlement in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR). As part of the deal, the company has permission to sink numerous bore holes to provide water for… Continue reading…

Tourists in Botswana Get Water, but G/wi Do Not

A travel company based in South Africa received permission on Friday from the government of Botswana to build a tourist lodge near a G/wi settlement in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR). As part of the deal, the company has permission to sink numerous bore holes to provide water for… Continue reading…

Ladakhi Reactions to Tourist Photography [journal article review]

Most Ladakhis enjoy being photographed, contrary to the assumptions of many camera-toting tourists who assume that they feel resentment toward the picture taking. In a recent journal article, Alex Gillespie, a British social psychologist who spent 12 months doing field work in Ladakh, focuses on the reactions of the Ladakhis… Continue reading…

Appropriate Tourism Develops in a Ju/’ hoansi Village

After visiting a village near the town of Tsumkwe, in eastern Namibia, a newspaper from that country describes in glowing terms the traditional customs of the Ju/’hoansi people. This is the third daily paper in ten years to focus on the Ju/’hoansi of this area. In 1997 the New York… Continue reading…

Travel Blogger Observes Lepcha Rituals

A travel blog to Sikkim has just concluded with a special focus on the Lepcha. It includes some good photos and a few interesting observations about the people and Himalayan landscape. Dubbing herself as “The Seeker,” the author of the blog is a 55 year old woman known as “Babs”… Continue reading…

Lancaster County Celebrates “Witness” Anniversary

Hollywood films about exotic societies sometimes impress fans with their good acting and brilliant cinematography, but their accuracy may be questionable. For instance, twenty-five years ago the comedy “The Gods Must Be Crazy” misrepresented the Ju/’hoansi, one of the San peoples of the Kalahari, as having an idyllic life in… Continue reading…