PurposeThis paper aims to explore the gradual commercialisation of second homes in non-urban locations and identifie a spectrum that ranges from lending to rentals to home exchange.Design/methodology/approachThis paper is a conceptual one based on a review of literature relating to the acquisiting and use of secondary residences or “second homes”.FindingsThis paper observes that the secondary residence is often the object of a material over-investment that is symbolic and mental. The owners never quite leave their main place of residence when in the secondary one. The result is not two complementary spaces, but a hybrid space made up of the interlocking of the two. This paper also concludes that digitalization has made it easier to rent a secondary residence for a short period of time, using for instance the Airbnb platform, thus making it more an object of trade than a second home. From a sustainability perspective, the COVID-19 pandemic is likely to bring to the relatively rapid growth of short-term renting a halt. Further, it may encourage owners to be more psychologically and physically invested in their secondary residence, thereby contributing more to the local economy.Originality/valueFew authors have considered the way digital tools can alter the relation with the secondary place of residence.
The topic of this paper deals with an exploration of the Maohi cosmogonie conception of land. The question is to know if, in the Oceanian insular world, there is a Maohi model of «terra firma» defined as an entity independent from its marine environment. We conclude that there is no such an individualisation of land which is perceived as a marine beeing belonging to a universally oceanic space. We shall see, then, that this Oceanian conception of the world has attended, or even enabled, the Maohi exploration and populating of the Pacific central area.
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