2020
DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1849233
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Community resourcefulness and partnerships in rural tourism

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Cited by 26 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The framework has four key components: (1) the role of three sectors (government, business, and civil society including philanthropy) and inter-sectoral cooperation, framed in the local historic, cultural, relational, and power contexts; (2) the significance of 'institutional entrepreneur' such as (but not restricted to) 'entrepreneurial philanthropy' to scale the social innovation initiative and to involve local stakeholders, and (3) engagement of local stakeholders to the initiative; and (4) the impact and change caused to the local community (Figure 1) [8,25]. There is already a considerable body of literature on BASN and Art Setouchi/Setouchi Triennale, including documentation written by key persons involved in the processes, which mostly focuses on the contribution of local governments (Naoshima town and Kagawa prefecture) and private business (Benesse Holdings) to develop the initiatives [26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34].…”
Section: Aim Of the Research And Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The framework has four key components: (1) the role of three sectors (government, business, and civil society including philanthropy) and inter-sectoral cooperation, framed in the local historic, cultural, relational, and power contexts; (2) the significance of 'institutional entrepreneur' such as (but not restricted to) 'entrepreneurial philanthropy' to scale the social innovation initiative and to involve local stakeholders, and (3) engagement of local stakeholders to the initiative; and (4) the impact and change caused to the local community (Figure 1) [8,25]. There is already a considerable body of literature on BASN and Art Setouchi/Setouchi Triennale, including documentation written by key persons involved in the processes, which mostly focuses on the contribution of local governments (Naoshima town and Kagawa prefecture) and private business (Benesse Holdings) to develop the initiatives [26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34].…”
Section: Aim Of the Research And Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4.1.4 Miscellaneous. Other enablers of RHT entrepreneurship include local support (Ateljevic, 2009;Qu et al, 2020), the social capital of the entrepreneur (Khazami et al, 2020;Ngoasong and Kimbu, 2016), family support (Ainley, 2014;, inheritance (Barbieri, 2013), effective networking (Lovelock et al, 2010;Schmitz and Lekane Tsobgou, 2016;Shen et al, 2019;Truong, 2020), built capital or shared infrastructure (Kline et al, 2019), strong visionary leader entrepreneurs (Moscardo, 2014), entrepreneurial and spatial bricolage (Yachin and Ioannides, 2020), an education level (Haugen and Jostein, 2008), business flexibility (Li et al, 2018), farm resource slack (Kristensen et al, 2019;McGehee and Kim, 2004) and technologies such as the internet (Andreopoulou et al, 2017;van der Merwe et al, 2013). Furthermore, the egonetworks of entrepreneurs and resource providers can also act as enablers or barriers (Yachin, 2020).…”
Section: Entrepreneur and Entrepreneurial Climate-related Barriersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4.5.1 Role of networks and ecosystems in innovation. Some studies have argued that the value of RHT for tourists lies in creating an ecosystem of services or events that provide a variety of experiences (Marques and Cunha, 2013;Qu et al, 2020). RHT entrepreneurs see beyond their individual gains to envision the development of the local rural area as an important motivator of value creation (Mottiar, 2016).…”
Section: Innovation and Value Creationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this kind of tourism, most usual types of booking are directly through the Internet, or via telephone or fax with no dominant role of large tour operators [34]. For rural tourism sustainability, it should managed by regional and local small enterprises [35][36][37]. In addition, social media has an important role in this industry as a marketing tool on tourists' decision-making and experience and also rural residents' tourism participation [38,39].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%