“…"Attachment theory" (Bowlby, 1969) suggests that interactions between people and places lead to the development of place attachment (Tuan, 1980). There is a growing consensus in the literature that place attachment has a multi-dimensional structure (Chen, Dwyer, & Firth, 2014;Ramkissoon et al, 2013), although some researchers define this structure as a two-dimensional one involving both place dependence and place identity (Williams & Roggenbuck, 1989;Williams & Vaske, 2003). According to some researchers, place attachment can be conceptualized as having the following dimensions: place dependence (Williams, Patterson, Roggenbuck, & Watson, 1992), place identity (Prohansky, 1978), social bonding (Ramkissoon et al, 2013) and, more recently, place affect (Halpenny, 2010).…”