2020
DOI: 10.3390/su12093677
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Understanding Communities’ Disaffection to Participate in Tourism in Protected Areas: A Social Representational Approach

Abstract: This manuscript uses a social-representational approach that allows for including social interactions, history and cultural background to explain and cluster resident attitudes to tourism in protected areas in developing countries. Based on the published evidence on the failure of community-based tourism programmes and projects that aim to achieve community engagement and benefits, and on scholars attributing those failures to the lack of consideration given to the perceptions and ambitions of the communities,… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
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“…Meanwhile, the identified group "Somewhat Irritated" in this study is similar to labels of "Haters," "Cynics," and "Opponents" in previous studies [57,58,60,61,64]. As has been suggested elsewhere by Sarr et al [84], such findings can create community "interventions should capacitate the group that supports tourism to lead initiatives, seduce the reluctant ones, energize those who seek to migrate and negotiate with the external tourist agents to achieve more equitable tourism development in which locals actively participate. "…”
Section: Research Implicationssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Meanwhile, the identified group "Somewhat Irritated" in this study is similar to labels of "Haters," "Cynics," and "Opponents" in previous studies [57,58,60,61,64]. As has been suggested elsewhere by Sarr et al [84], such findings can create community "interventions should capacitate the group that supports tourism to lead initiatives, seduce the reluctant ones, energize those who seek to migrate and negotiate with the external tourist agents to achieve more equitable tourism development in which locals actively participate. "…”
Section: Research Implicationssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…One of the first published segmentations is a study conducted on the Sleat peninsula (Isle of Skye) in Scotland [21][22][23]. Since then, studies have been carried out in various regions of the world: Australia [24][25][26][27][28], Brazil [29], Cambodia [30], Cape Verde [31], China [32][33][34][35][36], Croatia [37], Greece [38,39], Italy [17,[40][41][42][43][44], Malaysia [45], Mexico [46], New Zealand [5,[47][48][49], Portugal [50], Senegal [51], Spain [52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60][61], Sweden [62], Türkiye [63], United Kingdom [21][22][23]…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dalam hal ini, perencanaan pembangunan juga dapat dikaitkan dengan pembangunan pariwisata berkelanjutan sebagai output dalam konteks perubahan suatu wilayah. Untuk mencapai pembangunan pariwisata berkelanjutan yang sukses, intervensi harus memberi kemampuan kepada kelompok yang mendukung pariwisata untuk memimpin inisiatif, merayu yang enggan, memberi energi kepada mereka yang ingin bermigrasi dan bernegosiasi dengan agen wisata eksternal untuk mencapai pembangunan pariwisata yang lebih adil dimana penduduk setempat berpartisipasi aktif (Sarr et al, 2020).…”
Section: Pendahuluanunclassified