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African
Pro-poor Tourism Development Centre (APTDC) is a duly
registered charitable organization under Certificate
Number OP.218/051/2003/0369/3010 pursuant
to and in accordance with section 10 of the Non-Governmental
Organizations Coordination Act of Kenya. The organization
seeks to promote the utilization of tourism as a strategic
tool to alleviate poverty. The centre was the
first of its kind in the East African Travel & Tourism
Industry and until it was founded, tourism was not being
used as strategic tools towards addressing the various
social problems such as unemployment, poverty and gender
inequality. We at APTDC are guided by this slogan "Give
the local community a fish and you feed the for today,
teach the to fish and you feed them for ever"
Tourism
is the world largest growing industry with no signs
of slowing down in the twenty- first century. The industry
is helping the developing nations to earn the badly
needed foreign exchange of which Kenya is not an exception.
The job creation in the Travel and Tourism is growing
one-and-half times faster than any other sector. The
travel and tourism industry is labour intensive and
it employs about 200 million people worldwide. In Kenya
it employs about 500,000 people both directly and indirectly,
it's also estimated that about 850,000 dependants relay
on these employee for their livelihood.
We at APTDC belief that tourism can play a significant
part in promoting sustainable local development and
generating benefits for the poor. We are also convinced
that the power of tourism- one of the most dynamic economic
activities of our time- can be more effectively harnessed
to address the problems of poverty more directly. The
benefits of tourism should be widely spread in society
and the poor should benefit from tourism development.
Tourism has emerged in this decade as a central pillar
of the services economy, and it can uniquely help society
respond to global challenges, if its growth is managed
wisely, with an emphasis on ethics, poverty alleviation,
the particular interests of developing states and sustainable
development. The dynamic past and projected growth of
the tourism sector, its broad direct and indirect impact
across all economies - particularly those of developing
states make it particularly well suited as a development
tool.
Tourism is particularly potent in economic terms in
respect of: job creation, investment attraction, foreign
exchange earnings, poverty alleviation and in social
terms in respect of: youth employment, community enrichment,
gender equality and cultural preservation.
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