Critical impacts of tourism multiple case studies. Albert Postma

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Transcription:

Critical impacts of tourism multiple case studies Albert Postma 1 10/28/2008

Context Research programme research Group Service Studies Stenden university PhD study (2005-2009) Sustainable development 2 10/28/2008

Sustainable Development To meet the needs and aspirations of the present without compromising the ability to meet the needs and aspirations of future generations 3 10/28/2008

Core issues Conserving resources for future generations Balancing Social Economic needs/values Environmental Community level Aim: Quality of life Participatory planning & development Holistic (systems) approach Interdisciplinary research designs, interpretative methodologies 4 10/28/2008

Research issue PhD study To investigate how the process of acceptance (irritation/resistance) develops Acceptance: Perceived impact of tourism on quality of life Quality of life: The way we experience our lives (Max-Neef, 1992) 5 10/28/2008

Preliminary questions How does resistance arise? Which incidents are occurring during this process? Which stakeholders play a role in these incidents? What kind of resistance? Resistance with whom? How does one deal with resistance? How is the resistance expressed? How does it show? Is there any tipping point? (socio-cultural carrying capacity) 6 10/28/2008

Literature review Tourism development models Behavioural response models Independent factors affecting tourism perceptions & attitudes Theoretical frameworks trying to explain tourism perceptions and attitudes Methodologies tourism perceptions and attitudes 7 10/28/2008

Tourism development models Tourist Area Life Cycle (Butler, 1980) Irridex model (Doxey, 1975) Creative destruction applied to tourism (Mitchell, 1998) Chaos approach applied to tourism (McKercher, 1999) Tolerance index (Florida, 2002) 8 10/28/2008

Tourism development hypothesis Stage of tourism development With proceeding tourism development, positive perceptions are gradually replaced by negative perceptions. 9 10/28/2008 Hypothetical evolution of a tourist area, (Butler, 1980)

Doxey s index of irritation ( irridex ) Euphoria Visitors are welcome and there is little planning Apathy Visitors are taken for granted and contact becomes more formal Annoyance Antagonism Saturation is approached and the local people have misgivings. Planners attempt to control via increasing infrastructure rather than limiting growth Open expression of irritation and planning is remedial yet promotion is increased to offset the deteriorating reputation of the resort 10 10/28/2008

Behavioural response models Dynamic matrix (Bjorkland & Philbrick, 1972); Butler s, 1974) Dogans framework (1989) Ap & Crompton s framework (1993) Burns & Holden (1995) 11 10/28/2008

Independent factors (with various empirical evidence) Gender, age Birthplace Distance Community attachment Ethnicity Education level Length of residence & learning to live with tourism Type of tourist-resident contact Proximity to resorts Economic dependency Economic and tourism development Level of knowledge about tourism Involvement of residents in tourism decision making Tourism penetration Cold-warm 12 10/28/2008

Theoretical frameworks resident attitude - tourism impact Social exchange theory (Ap, 1992; Nash, 1989; Perdue e.a., 1990) Attribution theory Dependency theory Growth machine theory Community attachment Social representations theory (Moscovic, 1981, Pearce e.a., 1996) 13 10/28/2008

Dominant methodologies Tourism impacts Perception Attitude Behaviour Positivist approaches Multi-item scales o E.g. Tourism Impact Attitude Scale (TIAS, Lankford & Howard, 1994) 14 10/28/2008

Conclusions literature review Main focus on perception or attitude Based on much too simplistic and understanding of resident attitudes (Lankford & Howard, 1994: 135) Mainly exploratory and descriptive, not explanatory Mainly etic, positivist methodologies Need to empirically identify the dimensions of residents responses (Wall & Mathieson, 2006) Need for understanding and explanation: full consideration of the emic paradigm (Monterrubio, 2007) qualitative measures are needed for inclusions of a more personal voice on the community residents (Monterrubio, 2007) 15 10/28/2008

Research design (1) Social constructivist / interpretative approach Emic, contextual, process oriented methodology Multiple case study design Research as emerging process Low TPI Hight TPI Cold Terschelling (0,013) (0,007) Ameland (0,021) (1,000) Warm Curacao (0,085) (0,088) Aruba (0,493) (0,614) Figures refer to Tourism Penetraton Index, McElroy 16 10/28/2008

Aruba & Curacao 17 10/28/2008

Ameland & Terschelling 18 10/28/2008

Research design (2) Critical Incident Technique (adapted) Qualitative interviews with residents expert interviews Grounded analysis 19 10/28/2008

Model of acceptance process of tourism Model critical of acceptance process impacts of tourism Critical impact (unusual, different from what is expected) positive Desired level Level of acceptance Further critical impact neutral (adequacy) 20 10/28/2008 t1 Further critical impact time. Ongoing relation with tourism. Episode of critical process (e.g. length of residence) Most recent critical impact t2 negative Actors total impression of critical tourism impacts (Σ) determines the outcome, described in terms of how the relationship with tourism develops (short or long term) and in communication

Preliminary propositions (1) Main factors of irritation: tourists, mainly their behaviour Powerful stakeholders, mainly their behavour Mixed evidence of independent factors; Factors affect and outweigh each other 21 10/28/2008

Preliminary propositions (2) No continouous increase in irritation No tipping point in irritation, with specific responses Stepwise increase in irritation followed by adaptation 22 10/28/2008

Thank you for your attention 23 10/28/2008

Behavioural response models (detail) Bjorkland & Philbrick (1972); Butler s Dynamic matrix (1974) attitudinal/bahavioural responses to tourist activity (active-passive behaviour * positive-negative attitude affected by nature and degree of involvement with tourism) Dogans framework (1989): coping strategies of resistanceretreatism-boundary maintenance-revitalisation-adoption Ap & Crompton s framework (1993) continuum of strategies embracement-tolerance-adjustment-withdrawal Burns & Holden (1995) 24 10/28/2008