News & Dispatches

Report: Kenya’s Sex Tourism Industry Exploiting Children

A recent United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) report revealed that up to 30 percent of girls aged twelve to eighteen in Kenyan resort towns of Mombasa, Kilifi, Malindi and Kwale are involved in the sex industry. According to UNICEF, nearly half of all girls entered prostitution as young as twelve or thirteen. Much of the […]

Ski Resorts Warm to Wind Power

Ski resort owners are increasingly coming to terms with the risk global warming poses to their weather-dependent industry. Many are now turning to wind power as an alternative source of energy. In the Sierra Nevada mountain range of California, temperatures are expected to climb five or six degrees by the end of the 21st century. […]

China’s Olympic Games Projects not as “Clean” as Promised

When Beijing won the bid to host the Olympics, officials promised “clean” Games, both in terms of corruption and the environment. While the city has met a number of its goals, many argue Beijing still has a ways to go. Just recently, China’s Communist Party ousted its vice mayor of Olympics construction, Liu Zhihua, for […]

New Life for the Dead Sea

In a joint effort by Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Authority, a $5 billion project is being proposed in an attempt to revive the Dead Sea. In what is also being billed as a peace conduit, involved parties hope the project will not only save the fast-diminishing body of water – a resource shared among […]

Tourists and Gorillas

For many years, the fate of the mountain gorilla has looked dire. The gorillas live in east Africa’s Virunga Mountains, a chain of volcanoes bordered by Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. Gorilla populations face threats from habitat loss, poaching, disease and years of war and conflict. With only approximately seven hundred individuals […]

Green Tourism Awards

Green tourism awards play an important role in the world of responsible travel, offering public relations opportunities and sometimes financial rewards for recipients, as well as a means of selecting responsible operators for travelers. The following well-known green tourism awards offer a wealth of environmentally and culturally responsible options for the traveler. Tourism for Tomorrow […]

For the love of humanity, get off my beach!

Archbishop Desmond Tutu referred to South Africa as ‘The Rainbow Nation,’ due to the rich multicultural diversity of the population. A country with stunning natural beauty, exotic wildlife, abundant natural resources, temperate climes and a stable economy, South Africa has become a sought-after address, particularly in cosmopolitan coastal cities such as Durban and Capetown. Yet […]

Serious Corruption Reported in 71 Countries

Nearly 3 billion people ñhalf the world—are living on less than $2.00 US per day. Not surprisingly, nearly a billion of these people are chronically undernourished, thirty thousand children die poverty-related deaths per day, more than a billion people have no access to safe drinking water, and millions per year die of diseases which could […]

New York Takes the High Line

The High Line, an elevated rail line spanning 22 blocks and running through three Manhattan neighbourhoods, was constructed in the 1930s to transport freight out of New York. Out of use for over forty years, however, it has been under the threat of demolition since the mid-1980s. It was then that Joshua David and Robert […]