“…Navas-Ríos [24] points out that community-based tourism, from the beginning, has been envisioned as an offer of competitive quality and sustainable services in small nonurban localities that become an alternative source of income and, at the same time, a means to overcome poverty with community economic benefits that implicitly promote fair, equitable, and sustainable economic development. It is the local community that, using its natural and cultural resources and social capital, (1) designs, develops, implements and promotes a fair, equitable, and sustainable economy and (2) designs, develops, implements, and controls the tourism product to be offered and, at the same time, is an active part of it, respecting and conserving natural resources and socio-cultural wealth, satisfying the visiting tourists' needs from the quality experiences lived and shared with the local community and enabling them, in turn, to become aware of and learn about local and community wisdom [24].…”