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Understanding Doxey's Irritation Index and Coastal Systems in Sustainable Development

This overview explores Doxey's Irritation Index, which outlines the visitor experience in tourism, categorized into four phases: Euphoria, Apathy, Irritation, and Antagonism. Each phase reflects varying levels of satisfaction and challenges faced by local communities. Additionally, the concept of the coast as an open system is discussed, highlighting its dynamic nature with inputs from rivers and outputs to the sea. Processes like weathering, erosion, and deposition are integral in understanding coastal geography and its implications for sustainable development.

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Understanding Doxey's Irritation Index and Coastal Systems in Sustainable Development

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  1. GeographyModels

  2. Butlers Model

  3. Doxey’s Model • Doxey’s Irritation Index (Source: Doxey 1975) • 1.Euphoria — delight in contact • 2.Apathy — increasing indifference with larger numbers • 3.Irritation — concern and annoyance over price rises, crime, rudeness, and cultural rules being broken • 4.Antagonism — covert and overt aggression to visitors

  4. SustainableDevelopment

  5. Carryingcapacity

  6. Lee’s Model

  7. Step Migration

  8. DTM

  9. CPM

  10. Population Pyramids

  11. Rostows Model

  12. Coasts open system. • The coast is an open system because it has inputs from outside (eg. sediment from rivers) and outputs into other systems (eg. sediment transferred into deep seas). Many processes operate at the coast - for example, sub-aerial weathering, erosion, transportation and deposition. Some of the inputs, processes and outputs are shown on the diagram below.

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