What is it about?
This study contributes to the impacts of post-socialist restructuring on the evolution of tourism places by examining how processes of post-socialist reform have unfolded in Băile Herculane (Romania), radically disrupting its development path. Drawing on insights from evolutionary economic geography we conceptualise post-socialist restructuring as a ‘moment’ of change which produced impacts and new conditions which, in turn, dramatically reshaped the destination’s evolution. Twenty interviews were undertaken with tourism stakeholders in the town.
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Photo by Hulki Okan Tabak on Unsplash
Why is it important?
The impacts of the moment of post-socialist restructuring included a rapid decline in demand for domestic tourism, leaving the town dependent on state-sponsored social tourism. In a context of falling wages, many skilled hospitality workers left the town. A flawed privatisation process failed to inject the capital and expertise necessary to reinvigorate the accommodation sector. Tourism policy-makers (both national and local) did little to address the decline in tourism, while local economic actors had limited scope for innovation or entrepreneurship. The post-moment conditions of the town were characterised by a significant reduction in traditional tourism activities and under-investment in tourism infrastructure. However, there was some development of new tourism products, which shifted the geography of tourism activity within the town. Băile Herculane therefore demonstrates a range of pathway trajectories including path dependence, path contraction/downgrading, but also limited path renewal.
Perspectives

This case demonstrates the impact of post-socialism in (re)shaping destination trajectories and affirms the value of evolutionary economic geography for understanding local-scale and place-dependent processes and outcomes that shape destination evolution.
Dr Remus Cretan
west university of Timisoara
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Trigger events, moments, and destination evolution in a post-socialist context, Tourism Geographies, March 2025, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/14616688.2025.2481886.
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