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Title: Ecotourism Development International, community, and site perspectives


1
Ecotourism Development International, community,
and site perspectives
  • Chapter 4
  • Fennell

2
International Issues
  • Ecotourism is often touted as a tool for economic
    development.
  • Development Theory
  • Tourism in the underdeveloped world
  • Core-periphery concept

3
(International) Development Theory
  • It explores the economic and psychological link
    that exists between rich and poor countries.
  • Tourism perpetuates the division between those
    who have access to resources and those who do
    not.
  • To measure development, past research have used
    many different factors (e.g. daily intake of
    calories, death rate, aid per capita).

4
Development theory
  • Resources have also been used to gauge the
    development status of nations.
  • New approach to look at the development status of
    a nation. It emphasizes the basic needs of the
    poor, and advocates a sensitivity for development
    at the ground level.
  • Mountjoy (1971) stipulates that the most
    important factor are people.

5
Tourism in the underdeveloped world
  • Less Developed Countries (LDCs) suffer from a
    history of colonial domination.
  • Domination of the tourism sector in an LDC is
    most outwardly represented by the foreign
    ownership of airlines and hotels.

6
Tourism in the underdeveloped world
  • Future research should look at the need to
    document whether or not developing countries
    undergo the same social, ecological and economic
    dysfunctions from ecotourism as that from mass
    tourism.

7
Core-periphery concept
  • It is characterized by a dynamic, growing central
    region, and a slower-growing or stagnating
    periphery.
  • It is one of the main approaches used to explain
    development.
  • (Eco)Tourism avoids central places and is drawn
    to the periphery, reaching the natural resource
    base not found in the cities.

8
Core-periphery concept
  • It has also been applied to the analysis of
    adventure travel regions from a spatial context.
  • There is a movement from a semi-periphery, to a
    periphery and periphery frontier.
  • As frontier regions succumbs to further
    intrusion, the uniqueness of these areas
    diminishes, as does the potential for travel to
    untouched areas in the future as these areas
    become fewer in number.

9
Core-periphery concept
  • It has also a psychological component.
  • The following factors contribute to the mind-set
    of the traveler
  • familiarity with destination,
  • unscheduled change,
  • psychological and/or physical change,
  • distance from amenities,
  • adaptation,
  • population density,
  • authenticity,
  • symbolism,
  • scale of attraction,
  • distance from home.

10
Core-periphery concept
  • With the inability and lack of resources to fully
    plan and implement ecotourism on their own, the
    cycle of tourism dependency continues for
    peripheral regions.
  • Various Scales
  • Cape Breton Highlands Industrial Cape Breton
  • Cape Breton Island to Mainland Nova Scotia
  • Nova Scotia Lower and Upper Canada
  • Canada and Mexico to the USA

11
Core-periphery and Eco-tourism
  • Where will eco-tourism generally be situated?
  • Why
  • What is attractive about ecotourism that fits
    this situation?
  • How is it suited to this situation?

12
Community Development
  • Top down community development
  • Bottom up community development

13
  • Community development is based primarily on
    local initiatives.
  • It is the process by which efforts of the people
    themselves are combined with those of
    governmental authorities to improve economic,
    social, and cultural conditions of communities.
  • It focuses on the best quality of life possible
    for its members.

14
2 types of community development
  • Conventional community development
  • Focuses on the attraction of new businesses to
    the community (outward directed development
    approach).
  • Community economic development
  • Focuses on being small, green and social, and
    is more inward in its orientation through the
    principles of ecological sustainability,
    community control, etc.

15
  • Tourism was increasingly seen as a key community
    development tool in the 1990s.
  • Christensen proposes a quality of life framework.
  • MacKinnon suggests that the traditional mass
    tourism development model perpetuates the
    widening gap between rich and poor.
  • On the other hand, community based tourism lends
    itself to being environmentally sustainable.

16
  • William feels that all factions within the
    community need to cooperate effectively to ensure
    that a high quality-product is delivered without
    diminishing the ecology of the resource base and
    where the entire community is involved.
  • Drake defines local participation
  • as an ability of local communities to influence
    the outcome of development projects such as
    ecotourism that have an impact on them.

17
Model of local participation
  • 1)Determine the role of local participation in
    the project
  • 2)Choose research team
  • 3)Conduct preliminary studies
  • 4)Determine the level of local involvement.
  • 5)Determine an appropriate participation mechanism

18
Model of local participation
  • 6)Initiating dialogue and educational efforts
  • 7)Collective decision-making
  • 8)Development of an action plan and
    implementation
  • 9)Monitoring and implementation

19
  • Residents individual values need to be
    recognized by tourism developers in order for
    their projects to be successful
  • The attached resident
  • The resource user
  • The environmentalist
  • A newer leadership paradigm involves
    collaboration and partnerships between community
    individuals, groups, and organizations.

20
Partnerships
21
What is a partnership?
  • In the tourism industry, partnerships must be
    struck to ensure that a high-quality product is
    delivered, and is based on the notion that
    tourism experiences rely on all aspects of the
    community.

22
Potential partners in ecotourism
  • 1)organizations within the established tourism
    industry (tour operators)
  • 2)Government tourism bureaus and natural resource
    agencies
  • 3)NGOs
  • 4)Universities and other research organizations
  • 5)Other communities
  • 6)Other international organizations

23
The key to success in ecotourism partnership
  • 1)Build on the foundations of local culture
  • 2)Give responsibility to local people
  • 3)Consider returning ownership of at least some
    protected areas to indigenous people
  • 4)Hire local people
  • 5)Link government development programs with
    protected areas

24
The key to ecotourism partnership success
  • 6)Give priority to small-scale local development
  • 7)Involve local people in preparing management
    plans
  • 8)Have the courage to enforce restrictions
  • 9)Build conservation into the evolving new
    national cultures
  • 10)Support diversity as a value

25
Aboriginal interests
  • The relationship between aboriginal people and
    parks has often been one based on conflict.
  • In Canada, a revision must be made to the
    preservation mandate that currently exists in
    some types of parks, changing it to one that is
    conservation oriented.

26
Aboriginal interests
  • In order to develop a successful relationship,
    the following factors must be considered
  • 1)Community involvement
  • 2)Community benefits
  • 3)Scale
  • 4)Land ownership
  • 5)Sensitivity to needs of area residents and
    visitors

27
  • Experiential education and training are crucial
    in allowing such communities to develop
    ecotourism.
  • Training and skills enables aboriginal people to
    better understand their role within the parks and
    protected areas settings.
  • Aboriginal people can contribute equally to park
    management by applying Aboriginal ecological
    knowledge.
  • Government needs to take the lead in providing
    financial development and operational support,
    and training programs to develop appropriate
    marketing and business skills for this population.

28
Ecotourists Code
29
Site development
  • In the mid-1980s, a mega-resort boom began.
  • But today, there is an emergence of a trend
    towards more responsible travel and development.
  • This changing focus is more noticeable on a
    small-scale (urban, rural, and backcountry)
    setting.

30
Sustainable design and ecolodges
  • The ecotourism and ecolodge concept have been
    misused by resort advertisers in the past
  • From the perspective of the Aesculapia principle
    (place of healing),
  • nature is respected for its restorative
    qualities.
  • The human experience is set in harmony with the
    environment, and
  • an opportunity is created to allow a reconnection
    of human needs to the natural systems on which
    all life is based.

31
  • Ecolodge
  • -a nature dependent tourist lodge that meets the
    philosophy and principles of ecotourism.
  • -provides educational and experiential
    experiences for tourists.
  • -it is the philosophical tie with ecological
    sensitivity that must define these operations.
  • -it is being developed and managed in regard to
    the local environment in which it exists.

32
Table 7.2 p.236
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