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Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. From local periphery to global center: The evolution of Patagonia through green discourse
3. Territorializing Capital: The Political Economy of Nature in Argentine Patagonia
4. Patagonia: From Frontiers of Exploration to the Commodification of Nature
5. Social representations of territorial conflicts in Chilean Patagonia: Contexts and perspectives on sustainable tourism development
6. Social imaginaries of nature and tourism in Argentine Patagonia: stakeholder beliefs and values and their influence on national park creation
7. Infrastructure for tourism development in the Aysén Region of peripheral Chilean Patagonia: Trajectories and challenges for ecological and territorial connectivity
8. Tourism and Conservation in the Southern reaches of Patgoinia
9. Values, conflicts, and discourses and the global 30X30 initiative: A case study of Tompkins Conservation initiatives in Patagonia
10. Tensions between tourism, protected area environmental conservation, and indigenous territorial rights in the Pewenche Andes
11. Evolving models of tourism planning and use in protected areas of Chilean Patagonia
12. Local community governance of protected areas and tourism in Patagonia: An integrative management model for Chile's Cerro Castillo National Park
13. A case study of UNESCO Biosphere Reserves along the Chilean-Argentine border in the northern reaches of the Patagonia periphery: Opportunities and challenges for tourism development during the COVID-19 pandemic
14. Reimagining our relationship with Nature in northern Chilean Patagonia: Encounters and miss-encounters with the modern world
15. Key factors of resilience in Patagonian tourist destinations
16. Contributions to resilience and sustainability through time spent in nature
17. Methodology to evaluate the potential for a tourism based in science (Scientific Tourism) in destinations with an abundance of protected wildlife areas: The case of Patagonia
18. Remediating shifting baseline syndrome in the UNESCO Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve via the Field Environmental Philosophy Cycle
19. Conclusion: Research Needs.
2. From local periphery to global center: The evolution of Patagonia through green discourse
3. Territorializing Capital: The Political Economy of Nature in Argentine Patagonia
4. Patagonia: From Frontiers of Exploration to the Commodification of Nature
5. Social representations of territorial conflicts in Chilean Patagonia: Contexts and perspectives on sustainable tourism development
6. Social imaginaries of nature and tourism in Argentine Patagonia: stakeholder beliefs and values and their influence on national park creation
7. Infrastructure for tourism development in the Aysén Region of peripheral Chilean Patagonia: Trajectories and challenges for ecological and territorial connectivity
8. Tourism and Conservation in the Southern reaches of Patgoinia
9. Values, conflicts, and discourses and the global 30X30 initiative: A case study of Tompkins Conservation initiatives in Patagonia
10. Tensions between tourism, protected area environmental conservation, and indigenous territorial rights in the Pewenche Andes
11. Evolving models of tourism planning and use in protected areas of Chilean Patagonia
12. Local community governance of protected areas and tourism in Patagonia: An integrative management model for Chile's Cerro Castillo National Park
13. A case study of UNESCO Biosphere Reserves along the Chilean-Argentine border in the northern reaches of the Patagonia periphery: Opportunities and challenges for tourism development during the COVID-19 pandemic
14. Reimagining our relationship with Nature in northern Chilean Patagonia: Encounters and miss-encounters with the modern world
15. Key factors of resilience in Patagonian tourist destinations
16. Contributions to resilience and sustainability through time spent in nature
17. Methodology to evaluate the potential for a tourism based in science (Scientific Tourism) in destinations with an abundance of protected wildlife areas: The case of Patagonia
18. Remediating shifting baseline syndrome in the UNESCO Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve via the Field Environmental Philosophy Cycle
19. Conclusion: Research Needs.