Rural Tourism and Enterprise: Management, Marketing and Sustainability 2017
DOI: 10.1079/9781780647494.0034
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Sustainability, ethics and social responsibility: a developed economies perspective.

Abstract: This chapter defines key concepts that underpin the management of sustainability for rural tourism in developed countries, namely, the concepts of 'rural', rural development, rural tourism, sustainability and ethics. It also discusses the role of stakeholder theory in rural tourism sustainability; and outlines where different responsibilities lie when developing tourism in rural areas.

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…For his part, Wing (2018) relates 'Collective Social Responsibility' to innovation and technology, and the need to incorporate the use of technologies in universities and educational institutions to drive innovation. However, this approach departs from the argument put forward by Wiscombe (2017) and does not coincide with the model proposed here.…”
Section: The Collective Social Responsibility Model (Proposal)contrasting
confidence: 98%
“…For his part, Wing (2018) relates 'Collective Social Responsibility' to innovation and technology, and the need to incorporate the use of technologies in universities and educational institutions to drive innovation. However, this approach departs from the argument put forward by Wiscombe (2017) and does not coincide with the model proposed here.…”
Section: The Collective Social Responsibility Model (Proposal)contrasting
confidence: 98%
“…For instance, along the Camino de Santiago, the huge amount of different types of signs leading travellers along the path has inevitably changed the appearance of the landscape. Similarly, plastic objects discarded on the paths and rivers due to the gradually increasing of vending machines further spoils the original nature of the territory [93].…”
Section: Environmental Aspects Of Religious Travellers-the Sustainablmentioning
confidence: 99%