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・ Departure Rocks
・ Departure Songs
・ Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
・ Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (Australia)
・ Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (New Zealand)
・ Department of the South
・ Department of the Special Minister of State (1972–75)
・ Department of the Special Minister of State (1983–87)
・ Department of the Susquehanna
・ Department of the Taoiseach
・ Department of the Treasury
・ Department of the Treasury (Australia)
・ Department of the West
・ Department of Theory and History of Political Science
・ Department of Tourism
Department of Tourism (Australia)
・ Department of Tourism (Kerala)
・ Department of Tourism (Philippines)
・ Department of Tourism (South Africa)
・ Department of Tourism and Leisure
・ Department of Tourism and Recreation
・ Department of Tourism and Resorts of Ajara Autonomous Republic
・ Department of Tourism, Culture and Religious Endowments (Tamil Nadu)
・ Department of Tourism, Heritage and Culture
・ Department of Tourism, Leisure and Transport
・ Department of Trade (1956–63)
・ Department of Trade (1983–87)
・ Department of Trade and Customs (Australia)
・ Department of Trade and Industry
・ Department of Trade and Industry (Australia)


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Department of Tourism (Australia) : ウィキペディア英語版
Department of Tourism (Australia)

The Department of Tourism was an Australian government department that existed between December 1991 and March 1996.
==History==
The Department of Tourism was introduced in December 1991 by the newly elected Keating Government, described by media at the time as a "new mini-department" with fewer than 40 staff. Prime Minister Paul Keating said at the time that giving the department Cabinet status (rather than it being a branch of the previous Department of the Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories) would befit the tourism industry's position as one of the fastest growing industries in Australia.
Economist Dr Leo Jago at Curtin University argued in 2013 that establishing the department was a symbolic gesture and that the department's main role was to influence other departments, including the Department of Transport and Communications in regards to aviation reform and the Treasury regarding funding for the Australian Tourist Commission.
Inbound tourism to Australia jumped dramatically during the lifetime of the department, from 2 million visitors in 1988 to 3 million visitors in 1994.
After the Howard Government was elected at the 1996 federal election, Prime Minister John Howard dismantled the department, assigning its functions to the newly created Department of Industry, Science and Tourism.

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