tvc title
Solution Graphics


(Your shopping cart is empty)

 

FILM: Impact Of Tourism: Kenya
FILM: Impact Of Tourism: Kenya
 



DVD (schools and colleges) [£47.00 plus VAT]
DVD (universities and businesses) [£97.00 plus VAT]
1 year streaming (schools and colleges) [£23.50 plus VAT]
1 year streaming (universities and businesses) [£43.50 plus VAT]
IF YOU ORDER "DVD" we will send you the DVD
IF YOU ORDER "STREAMING" we will email you a password on receipt of order

Qty:

  
 
29 mins, 2011       

[password required]
Key Topics
  • Tourism
  • Kenya
  • Africa
  • Safari
  • Masai Mara
Tourism is Kenya's third largest source of income. Last year alone, more than half a million tourists spent their holidays here. But what don't the tourists see?

MASAI MARA: The Masai Mara is one of the best-known game parks in the world. All around the game park, mock villages have been built. Laden with baubles, the Masai embark on an aggressive sales pitch to the tourists. These fake villages are all that most tourists see while on safari. Meanwhile other Masai still live on their farms trying to maintain their traditional lifestyles, but are barely able to survive.

SAFARIS: Safari tourism is highly popular. Tourists come by the thousands in their 4x4 vehicles to take pictures in the game reserves. When a leopard is spotted tourists take part in a photographic feeding frenzy - a traffic jam forms in the bush. Meanwhile Lewa is a 5-star private game reserve unknown to the general public - a luxury safari park, frequented by American millionaires.

WINNING BACK RIGHTS: A few hundred miles away to the north are the ancestral lands of the Endoroi tribe - lands which the Kenyan authorities confiscated more than 30 years ago, to make way for a game park for tourists. Like the Masai, the Endorois want to be recognized as the rightful owners of the territory. And now they are - but only after a lengthy court case against the government.
There are at present no support materials available for this film