Abstract

Despite Algeria’s strategic geographical location as a portal to Africa from Europe and the continuous attempts to reform its tourism sector, this postcolonial country has failed to become a tourism hub in the Mediterranean area. In Algeria, the year 2008 witnessed the birth of a tourism development plan named ‘Horizon 2025’, projecting strategies and goals to be achieved by 2025. However, the plan did not achieve its expected results because of various socio-political and external issues such as the country’s recent political instability and the global Covid-19 pandemic. However, surprisingly, Algeria’s domestic market has witnessed noticeable growth in the last 20 years, especially during the global pandemic. The present case study reflects on the development of the Horizon 2025 plan and its contribution to the rebranding of Algeria as a destination and the consequential outcomes that helped the growth of its domestic tourism market. Through the case study, we showcase the efforts made to build Algeria as an attractive destination and how Covid-19 challenged the plan’s forecasted goals while paving the way for the development and promotion of domestic tourism.

Rights

This item is embargoed on the University of the West of Scotland's repository until 28/3/23. Please contact the UWS repository during this time to see if you can request a copy for personal use. This is the author accepted manuscript, licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/. The final published article is available at: https://doi.org/10.1079/tourism.2022.0001 .

Cite as

El Azzaoui, I., Carnicelli, S. & Khodadadi, M. 2022, 'Tourism development in Algeria and the Horizon 2025 Plan', Tourism Cases. https://doi.org/10.1079/tourism.2022.0001

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Last updated: 16 June 2022
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