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As a number of countries begin to reopen their borders to foreign tourists and pre-departure COVID-19 requirements become more uncommon, 2022 looks like it may be the year travel bounces back. But should we fire it up the way it was? Or can it change for the better? Travel community is hopeful for the latter.

To celebrate his 24th birthday, Nate Agbetu flew to Tokyo. The creative strategist from East London hadn鈥檛 picked for its Sens艒-ji temple or to see its pink cherry blossoms, instead, he鈥檇 chosen it so he could be fully immersed.

鈥淚 wanted to go on my first solo trip and I wanted to go somewhere where I'd like to be entirely culturally shocked,鈥 Agbetu says.

Through his creative studio, Agbetu鈥檚 work typically focuses on creating intersections between communities, such as the film he made for the at London鈥檚 Design Museum: not only does the movie recognize the contribution of the Black community to the musical genre, but Agbetu also launched that gives away free tickets to individuals underrepresented in the arts. Now his vocation was influencing his travels too.

A black man stands outside traditional Japanese architecture and smiles for the camera
Nate was a purposeful traveler on his recent trip to Japan 漏 Nate Agbetu

鈥淚 was working on a spatial design brief and the way the Japanese think about space and design is just beautiful,鈥 he says. During a week-long trip, Agbetu took in exhibitions, ate 鈥渟ome of the most hearty r膩men鈥 he鈥檇 ever had at Afuri in Ebisu, and met a number of local people 鈥 but it was an introduction to the 鈥榸ine scene that enthralled him the most.

鈥淭hey have a big culture of just making different 鈥榸ines, using paper as a kind of architectural piece,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t's not just about what's in it, but it's also about how it's folded up and how it comes together. I found out a lot about that from some of the art kids that I met over there.鈥

By actively pursuing a trip with the intention of learning through local interaction in a mutually beneficial way, Agbetu was engaging in purposeful travel, a polysemy that has differing definitions for each traveler but is described by Trippin as a 鈥渕indset鈥.

This was true for Agbetu. His vacation in Japan and a second trip to the Palestinian Territories were about widening his understanding of the world rather than ticking something off a bucket list. 鈥淏oth trips were more for me to understand how people socialize in different places, and understand a bit more about the way we interact and learn from what it means to live inside of another culture and to adapt to it without being voyeuristic or exploitative.鈥

An inside spread of the Trippin report, with the headline
Trippin's Future of Travel report looks into how to travel with purpose 漏 Trippin

What is purposeful travel?

So could purposeful travel be the future? A report commissioned by London鈥檚 public research university UCL for the travel community Trippin suggests it could. But it will require an overhaul by brands and introspection by travelers.

鈥淲e always say [purposeful travel is] a change in mindset,鈥 says the co-founder of Trippin, Kesang Ball. 鈥淭raveling the world is amazing: It鈥檚 there to be explored, cultures are there to be connected to, and I think that it brings us together. By understanding people's differences, we can understand more of our own.鈥

Trippin started as a Facebook group in 2016 before it expanded into a website that blended articles, films, and podcasts with city guides curated by local cultural icons 鈥 such as the , or with the producer Verraco.

鈥淥ur destination insights and guides are written by local journalists and cultural figures who can offer different lenses on how to experience their city and culture,鈥 says Ball, 鈥渆nsuring stories from both sides of the lens are always present.鈥

By partnering with local creators, Trippin publishes inclusive, intentional, and hyper-local work, designed to empower travelers to have rich, sustainable travel experiences. Ball argues that travel writing by Western media publications can distort authentic narratives in a destination, creating unrealistic expectations for travelers.

鈥淭rips and experiences are different for each traveler which is something I've always been conscious of as someone from a mixed heritage background,鈥 she says. When Trippin relaunches in 2022, purposeful travel will be at its heart. Should other travel publications follow suit?

An selfie of an Asian woman on a beach
Meera writes and presents on how to decolonize travel writing 漏 Meera Dattani

Travel needs to be more diverse and inclusive

A found that there are no non-white editors in top roles across the top ten news outlets, both online and offline. The report concluded that white people are 鈥渟ignificantly over-represented among top editors,鈥 and 鈥渁nd non-white people are significantly under-represented.鈥

The found much of the same. It revealed that 92% of journalists are white 鈥 a drop of 2% compared with the same survey in 2017 鈥 and a figure higher than the proportion for the UK workforce as a whole (88%).

Meera Dattani, the Senior Editor of 鈥 now publishing again following a nine-month hiatus due to COVID-19 鈥 is one of only a handful of non-white travel editors in the UK. She believes that the lack of representation in the travel media is bad for travelers.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so important for travel media to have more diverse voices 鈥 it鈥檚 this variety of personal experiences, background, and perspectives that bring a much-needed different, refreshing angle to the table,鈥 says Dattani. 鈥淭here鈥檚 less chance of and when you have this inclusivity as the approach to travel isn鈥檛 from the same type of person,鈥 she adds.

Dattani believes the industry needs diversity from the top down, including editorial teams who make decisions about what gets published and how copy is presented. The , which Dattani co-founded with fellow travel journalist Shivani Ashoka in 2020, shines a light on this very issue. Since its inception, she believes there has been a small shift in editorial sensitivity.

"There are more open, honest conversations around language and why we might not use certain words or why we need to provide more context if we do," says Dattani "[This] doesn鈥檛 mean everyone is having this debate, but certainly it feels like more editors, publications and travel companies are."

Sophie Lam, Travel Editor of the , is one of them. She has often spoken out about using a variety of voices and publishing inclusive work. Lottie Gross and Steph Dyson who run newsletter have argued that the genre needs to be decolonized and that LGBTQ+ inclusion needs to improve.

A number of tour operators have started to implement change too. In 2021, Intrepid Travel published an to show openly how they are trying to sell destinations in more diverse, equal, and transparent ways.

鈥淢odern travel writing is generally based on the writing genre that emerged during colonization, so this European-centric colonial gaze means we end up promoting that observation-led style of travel, rather than genuinely engaging with people,鈥 says Dattani. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 challenge the narratives that are fed to us, we will just keep telling the same old stories even through travel writing.鈥

Dattani says a number of "really bold journalists" are already beginning to change the stories being told and "tell it as it is". She points to Lebawit Lily Girma writing about and Zoey Goto on the , for BBC Travel as just two examples.

A shot of an open suitcase with two burgundy British passports on the top, and some Trippin-branded stickers
The Trippin report discusses sustainable tourism alongside the intersectionality of a traveler's identity 漏 Trippin

Time to think about both people and the planet

The Trippin report says that for purposeful travel to work, it has to be both sustainable and available to all. 鈥淭o us, purposeful travel considers the pillars of sustainable tourism but also the intersectionality of a traveler鈥檚 identity,鈥 it reads.

The report suggests that travelers should not only think about the environmental implications of how they travel, and the social and economic impact of their visits 鈥 choosing where they stay, how they interact with locals, where they spend their money 鈥 but it also calls on the travel industry to create sustainable solutions for the future that are far more inclusive and to consider the intersectionality of the person traveling too.

Developed by lawyer and philosopher Kimberl茅 Crenshaw, intersectionality refers to race, class, and gender as interlocking systems of oppression. 鈥淭his conceptual model, when applied to the travel industry, shines a light on how uneven its landscape is and helps us think about how power, oppression, resistance, privilege, benefits, and disadvantages are systematically distributed,鈥 reads the report.

Joycelyn Longdon is the founder of, an education platform that aims to make climate conversations more accessible and diverse, agrees that the way we travel needs to change.

鈥淚t is also important for marginalized people to not be deterred from traveling but to unapologetically show up,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think that by more people of color, people with disabilities, and queer people showing up and taking space in travel sectors, the more intersectional the space will become.

A Black male wearing make up, large hoop earrings and an off-the-shoulder white top
Travel needs to be available to all people with different identities 漏 Trippin

The way we choose to travel is important as well. 鈥淲e cannot continue into the future with our current travel habits,鈥 says Longdon. 鈥淥ur planet and environment are under so much pressure as it is and it's only going to get worse. We need to reimagine what travel is, before the destinations we want to jet-set to disappear underwater or are ravaged by ever more powerful and destructive hurricanes.鈥

, tourism accounts for 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions, but thanks to the internet, it鈥檚 never been easier to make informed choices about traveling sustainably. The UN's Environment Programme (UNEP) has been advocating that travelers engage in slow, low-carbon travel for decades, and whilst consumers can make some small changes themselves, the industry as a whole needs to seriously think about its environmental impact.

鈥淲e need to stop buying last-minute flights,鈥 says Longdon. 鈥淥ur travel should be planned more intentionally and we should advocate for change in the workplace in terms of how we take holiday,鈥 she adds. 鈥淚t also means advertising less frivolous, impulsive experiences and really showing the destination through a local's eyes rather than tourists.鈥

A Ghanaian woman poses for a photo close to Elmina Castle in Ghana.
Interact with locals for an authentic travel experience 漏 Olivier Blaise / Getty Images

Travel with intention

So how can travelers engage positively and with purpose? 鈥淚 think travelers should meditate over the reasons for their travel before pressing the book button,鈥 says Longdon. 鈥淲e book flights like we order Deliveroo, and while I love spontaneity, I don鈥檛 think we meditate enough over why we are traveling, what we want to get out of it, how we can travel authentically, and even take some time to learn about the destinations culture, history, and people before flying.鈥

Longdon believes that purpose comes from intention, something that Gabby Beckford, founder of the says she sees in the choices of Millennials and Generation Z travelers.

鈥淕en Z travels specifically for social reasons, for self-awareness reasons, for self-improvement, for discovery and identity,鈥 says Beckford, who is also part of the, a group of Black travel content creators that looks to increase the representation of Black people in the travel industry. 鈥淭he way that we travel is more intentional.鈥

Beckford believes that travelers born after 1980 are more likely to base their decisions on the harm a trip could do to the planet. 鈥淕eneration Z is like the FBI when it comes to research,鈥 she says. 鈥淸They鈥檒l ask]: 鈥榃hat's my carbon emissions in flying versus taking a train for 48 hours?鈥欌

A black woman wearing an orange dress with matching sneakers poses for the camera
Ashlee questions if locals are considered valued customers in Barbados' resorts 漏 Ashlee Constance

Think local and watch where your money is going

Many young travelers crave authenticity as well. 鈥淎uthenticity is very important, without authenticity, the culture, character, and life of a place are erased and replaced with a, usually, Western-centric ideal,鈥 argues Longdon. 鈥淚t's about fostering opportunities to see the destination through a local eye.鈥

This means interacting with locals, eating in the same restaurants as they do, drinking in the same bars. 鈥淚 think each traveler defines what is authentic to themselves [...] but in general it is engaging with the reality that never leaves the destination,鈥 she adds.

It could mean rethinking our accommodation options as well. 鈥淚 think purposefully traveling, which is like truly interacting with people in their environment, is a much greater way of learning anything or experiencing anything than going to a resort,鈥 says Nate Agbetu, who argues that fly-and-flops to foreign-owned hotels fuels an outdated system of capitalism and shows an idea of travel that has been sold to travelers via the media.

estimated that 70% of all money spent by tourists ended up leaving Thailand and went to foreign-owned businesses. showed that the highest percentage of tourism 鈥榣eakage鈥 came from 4- and 5-star chain hotels (55.31%), while local, non-star hotels only leaked 2%.

"With COVID-19, resorts, hotels, restaurants became pretty desperate to get locals into their properties,鈥 says Ashlee Constance, a social media marketing specialist from Barbados. 鈥淎t first it was exciting to think, finally I鈥檒l be able to afford such experiences or be a tourist in my own country but at some point you begin to question: Is this possible because they see us as valued customers or it is because they have no other choice?鈥

A woman leans against a pillar posing for the camera
Kesang, co-founder of Trippin, worked with a local crew in Nigeria to ensure the culture was authentically represented 漏 Kesang Ball

Travel with purpose when exploring close to home too

Kesang Ball thinks that we all need to travel with purpose locally too. "My recent trips have all been local,鈥 she says, 鈥渟o I've focused on choosing a more sustainable method of transport getting there.鈥

In 2021, one of Trippin鈥檚 co-founders, Sam Blenkinsopp, visited Pembrokeshire in Wales. 鈥淟ong hikes along the coastline geared up in as much Goretex as humanly possible to protect from the sideways rain, followed by takeaway fish and chips in the car,鈥 he says. 鈥淔or some that could sound like a nightmare but for me it's a nostalgic one, reminding me of trips with my family growing up.鈥

Blenkinsopp decided to go to Wales because it was close to home. He also suggests traveling off-season and buying from locally-owned businesses as purposeful ways to travel.

The Trippin team echoes this in how they commission and create their own content too. 鈥淲e went out to Lagos to document the local creative scene and the people out there who are moving culture forward,鈥 says Ball. 鈥淲ith every piece of content we create, it鈥檚 important for us to ensure we are authentically representing the culture of that destination. So in Lagos, we made sure that our crew, even down to the producers on the ground, scouts and the director of photography were all from Nigeria. You always create the best content that way.鈥

Ball believes that depicting each destination in a way that locals would want it to be seen gives younger people a genuine glimpse into a culture. 鈥淭raditional media platforms that publish travel stories have frequently perpetuated and distorted cultural narratives,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey influence tourists on what to expect of cultures when they arrive. Putting cultures and communities across into 鈥榙igestible buckets鈥 [that are] palpable for the Western lens. This has so many negative impacts on cultural exchange and honestly, young people are over it.鈥

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This article was first published Dec 21, 2020 and updated Feb 24, 2022.

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