ABSTRACT. The study represents an exploratory attempt to capture the underlying reasons for tourists' decisions to visit a destination. The main objective of this study is to examine the specific case of a tourism destination, investigating first whether there are differences between motivations of those who are from different countries traveling to the destination of Barbados. Secondly, the study examines whether there are any differences in the motivations between male and female tourists, and among tourists of different age groups. Thus, it is a comparative study of differences in motives between specific groups. As a result, it attempts to incorporate the experiential view into a construct such as the image of the tourism destination. This article seeks to propose an integrated approach to understand tourist motivations based on origins and how these contribute to the tourists' perception of a destination.
This study tested the direct effects of three dimensions of organizational justice -distributive justice, procedural justice, and interactional justice -on contextual performance, counterproductive work behaviors, and task performance. The study also examined the moderating effects of an ability measure of emotional intelligence (EI) on the justice-performance relationship. Based on the data from 211 employees across nine organizations from the private and public sectors in a developing country in the Caribbean, the results revealed that all three justice dimensions had significant effects on task performance, contextual performance, and counterproductive work behaviors in the expected direction. Composite EI and its four subdimensions (appraisal and expression of emotion in the self, appraisal and recognition of emotion in others, regulation of emotion, and use of emotion) moderated the relationship between procedural justice and contextual performance, but failed to moderate other justice-performance relationships.
Purpose-The study investigates the perceptions of auditor independence (PAI) between auditors and users in Barbados. Design/methodology/approach-A self-administered questionnaire was adapted and modified from Beattie et al.'s study in the UK the sample included 66 auditors and 148 users. Factors relating to the size and closeness of Barbadian society, lengthy tenure and being a sole audit practitioner, small audit firm, provision of non-audit services (NAS) among others, were investigated. Findings-Economic dependence of auditor on the client, the provision of NAS, high competition, small firm size, being a sole practitioner, lengthy tenure and the size and closeness of Barbadian society were found to negatively affect PAI. Auditor independence was perceived to be enhanced by the existence of audit committees, rotation of audit partners, risks to auditor arising from poor quality, regulatory rights and requirements surrounding auditor change and an auditor's right to attend and be heard at the company's annual general meetings. Research limitations/implications-Owing to the relatively small sample size and small emerging market, these findings should be interpreted with caution. Practical implications-This research serves to inform audit related policies and regulation on the potential threats to auditor independence. Originality/value-This paper contributes to the limited body of research on auditor independence in small developing countries.
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