Today’s Observer carries a story written by Catherine Mack who recently graduated from the MSc in Responsible Tourism Management about the work which Cheryl Mvula, one of the students on the ICRT precursor Tourism and Conservation courses at UKC, has done in the Maasai Mara. It is good to see two of our alumni working together “to make better places for people to live in, and better places for people to visit.”

“In January 2006, Dr Cheryl Mvula, a consultant in responsible tourism, came to the Maasai Mara on holiday from the UK, and decided to take a cultural tour of Enkereri, a Maasai village. She paid $20 and watched as the money was given to the village elders. After her tour, she was shown the women's craft work. The women appeared really desperate to sell to the tourists, even though her tour group had just given the village $100.

Cheryl made some enquiries and a contact who worked for a Kenyan tour operator told her: 'While you are off looking at curios, your driver guide takes the money back from the elders. They leave them $4 out of the $100. That's how it's been working here for 30 years.” Read the rest of the story at www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2008/may/11/kenya.africa

The Observer is running some very good features promoting Responsible Tourism - see for example its piece on 20 Best Agrotourismos in Mallorca. Read it online at

http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2008/may/11/balearicislands.spain