2018
DOI: 10.1002/jtr.2213
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The impact of volunteer tourism on local communities: A managerial perspective

Abstract: Volunteer tourism, as a potential tool for community development and sustainability, has been gaining the attention of researchers for the past decade. However, little empirical research exists about the impact of this activity on the host communities from the managerial point of view. The research, based on a qualitative study of managers' opinions from volunteer tourism organizations' leading programs worldwide, not only emphasizes the impacts of voluntourism but also suggests moving from a top-down style of… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
(77 reference statements)
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“…Conversely, respondents in localized clusters of negative perceptions were more likely to be less educated, have a lower income, and have low personal benefits from tourism than the rest of the sample. These findings are consistent with the conclusions that residents with higher levels of education [59], income [29], and personal benefits from tourism [7,18] perceived significantly higher positive impacts from tourism development. However, our results do not accord with Andriotis' (2004) finding that senior residents perceived tourism impacts to be more advantageous in contrast with young residents [1]; however, our results do support Liu and Li's (1988) findings that age and gender were not factors in residents' perceptions of tourism [60].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Conversely, respondents in localized clusters of negative perceptions were more likely to be less educated, have a lower income, and have low personal benefits from tourism than the rest of the sample. These findings are consistent with the conclusions that residents with higher levels of education [59], income [29], and personal benefits from tourism [7,18] perceived significantly higher positive impacts from tourism development. However, our results do not accord with Andriotis' (2004) finding that senior residents perceived tourism impacts to be more advantageous in contrast with young residents [1]; however, our results do support Liu and Li's (1988) findings that age and gender were not factors in residents' perceptions of tourism [60].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Tourists and residents are not disconnected members of a system. They influence each other co-creating the destination at the same time (Hernandez-Maskivker et al 2018). Locals play a key role in prosperous and sustainable destinations (Muler Gonzalez et al 2018) so to pay attention to their perceptions, opinions, dreams, doubts and goals is crucial to find synergies and cooperation.…”
Section: Findings and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Communitybased planning and management become the only option for tourist destinations to survive (Del Chiappa et al 2018). Thus, alliances and inclusive partnership between the public, private sector, local investors and community are essential for responsible development (Hernandez-Maskivker et al 2018).…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Volunteer tourism eschews the impersonal, distant forces and abstract theories associated with more established iterations of development. Instead it appeals to the building of communities -frequently projects that volunteers work on will be prefixed by 'community based' (Hernandez-Maskivker et al, 2018;Lupoli, 2013;Lupoli et al, 2014). Advertising and advocacy of volunteer tourism is replete with implicit and explicit references to local community, in terms of helping the community, forging a sense of community and being a part of a community as a visitor (Hernandez-Maskivker et al, 2018;Lupoli, 2013;Lupoli et al, 2014).…”
Section: From Nation To Local Communitymentioning
confidence: 99%