WILDLIFE CONSERVATION THROUGH TOURISM MICROENTREPRENEURSHIP AMONG NAMIBIAN COMMUNITIES

被引:16
|
作者
Morais, Duarte B. [1 ]
Birendra, K. C. [1 ]
Mao, Yuchen [1 ]
Mosimane, Alfons [2 ]
机构
[1] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Pk Recreat & Tourism Management, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
[2] Univ Namibia, Multidisciplinary Res Ctr, Windhoek, Namibia
来源
TOURISM REVIEW INTERNATIONAL | 2015年 / 19卷 / 1-2期
关键词
Wildlife tourism microentrepreneurship; Communal conservancies; Wildlife value orientations; People-First Tourism;
D O I
10.3727/154427215X14338796190477
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Wildlife conservation has often focused on protecting charismatic wildlife from native communities and allowing multinational companies to profit from showing those resources to foreign tourists. This has contributed to local poverty and fueled poaching and concomitant policing of resources by governments, foreign conservationists, and private industry. An alternative receiving increasing scholarly attention consists on enabling eco-dependent tourism microentrepreneurship as a way to foster local conservation behaviors. In the case of wildlife tourism in Namibia, this might entail the provision of wildlife tours and camping services by indigenous communities. Accordingly, the purpose of this study was to examine the extent to which wildlife tourism microentrepreneurship leads to intrinsically motivated wildlife conservation. A controlled comparison case study design was used to test this research question. The findings reveal that males in conservancy communities have internalized proconservation behaviors and both males and females in those communities report richer and more complex wildlife value orientations.
引用
收藏
页码:43 / 61
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The emergence of institutional innovations in tourism: the evolution of the African Wildlife Foundation's tourism conservation enterprises
    Van Wijk, Jakomijn
    Van der Duim, Rene
    Lamers, Machiel
    Sumba, Daudi
    JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM, 2015, 23 (01) : 104 - 125
  • [32] Towards a model for the assessment of conservation, welfare, and governance in wildlife tourism attractions
    Fennell, David A.
    Moorhouse, Tom P.
    Macdonald, David W.
    JOURNAL OF ECOTOURISM, 2024, 23 (02) : 166 - 193
  • [33] Towards a Decommodified Wildlife Tourism: Why Market Environmentalism Is Not Enough for Conservation
    Belicia, Teo Xin Yi
    Islam, Md Saidul
    SOCIETIES, 2018, 8 (03)
  • [34] Wildlife tourism through the co-creation lens
    Bertella, Giovanna
    Fumagalli, M.
    Williams-Grey, V
    TOURISM RECREATION RESEARCH, 2019, 44 (03) : 300 - 310
  • [35] Tourists' support for conservation messages and sustainable management practices in wildlife tourism experiences
    Ballantyne, Roy
    Packer, Jan
    Hughes, Karen
    TOURISM MANAGEMENT, 2009, 30 (05) : 658 - 664
  • [36] #oldnews: Diffusion of pro-conservation behaviors and social media in wildlife tourism
    Schuler, Gwyneth M.
    Skibins, Jeffrey C.
    HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF WILDLIFE, 2023, 28 (05) : 453 - 467
  • [37] Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on tourism, income of local communities and biodiversity conservation: Evidence from Burunge wildlife management area, Tanzania
    Chebby, Francis
    Mmbaga, Naza
    Ngongolo, Kelvin
    HELIYON, 2024, 10 (02)
  • [38] Developing poor communities through creative tourism
    Dias, Alvaro
    Gonzalez-Rodriguez, Maria Rosario
    Patuleia, Mafalda
    JOURNAL OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL CHANGE, 2021, 19 (04) : 509 - 529
  • [39] Transfrontier Conservation Areas and Human-Wildlife Conflict: The Case of the Namibian Component of the Kavango-Zambezi (KAZA) TFCA
    Stoldt, Mirja
    Goettert, Thomas
    Mann, Carsten
    Zeller, Ulrich
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [40] Transfrontier Conservation Areas and Human-Wildlife Conflict: The Case of the Namibian Component of the Kavango-Zambezi (KAZA) TFCA
    Mirja Stoldt
    Thomas Göttert
    Carsten Mann
    Ulrich Zeller
    Scientific Reports, 10