2021
DOI: 10.3390/su13010408
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Tourism Impacts, Tourism-Phobia and Gentrification in Historic Centers: The Cases of Málaga (Spain) and Gdansk (Poland)

Abstract: This study analyzes the role of residents in urban tourist destinations affected by the increase in tourist flows, which have generated various problems such as tourism, gentrification and the emergence of tourism as a threat to residents. The role of residents in tourist destinations has not been analyzed regularly during the development process of destinations. We study two cases of historic centers in European cities, with the aim of comparing tourism problems, which are common to most European urban destin… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In spite of all economic benefits and the renewal of central urban areas, there was an increase in relevant social and environmental frictions, resulting from the unbridled growth of tourism activity in cities. The debate was about how cities deal with the excess of tourism (overtourism), considering the contestation of residents, the processes of gentrification, or the need for greater territorial equity in the distribution of benefits [12][13][14][15][16][17][18]. The growth of urban tourism and international travel based on short stays (city break segment) was associated with an increase in the sector's carbon footprint.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In spite of all economic benefits and the renewal of central urban areas, there was an increase in relevant social and environmental frictions, resulting from the unbridled growth of tourism activity in cities. The debate was about how cities deal with the excess of tourism (overtourism), considering the contestation of residents, the processes of gentrification, or the need for greater territorial equity in the distribution of benefits [12][13][14][15][16][17][18]. The growth of urban tourism and international travel based on short stays (city break segment) was associated with an increase in the sector's carbon footprint.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, the overtourism experienced by some cities is not a cause of the sudden increase in the number of tourists, but rather the increasing presence of these in the residential neighborhoods of the cities [55][56][57]. Thus, it is establishing a negative relationship between the evolution of the resident population of the neighborhoods and the increase in tourists and tourist accommodation [58,59].…”
Section: Negative Effects Of Tourism Authorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, they represent notable improvements in the quality of public space and sustainable mobility, but on the other, they have generated undesirable effects, such as the expulsion and displacement of traditional small businesses, replaced by franchises and multinationals. This urban model inevitably consolidates processes of exclusion, gentrification, and socio-spatial segregation that drive the loss of diversity, identity, and complexity in urban centers [55,58,59,88,89].…”
Section: Area Studiedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the global context, plethora of studies incorporating the impacts of tourism do exist in tourism literature ( Allen et al., 1988 ; Almeida-García et al., 2015 ; 2021 ; Balaguer and Cantavella-Jordá, 2002 ; Besculides et al., 2002 ; Butler, 1980 ; Comerio and Strozzi, 2019 ; Dwyer and Forsyth, 1993 ; Greiner et al., 2004 ; Haralambopoulos and Pizam, 1996 ; Kozhokulov et al., 2019 ; Lepp, 2007 ; Liu and Li, 2018 ; Maldonado-Oré and Custodio, 2020 ; Mathieson and Wall, 1982 ; Mcdowall and Choi, 2010 ; Mikayilov et al., 2019 ; Nepal, 2000 ; Nepal et al., 2002 ; Nunkoo and Gursoy, 2012 ; Pickering et al., 2018 ; Shih and Do, 2016 ; Truong et al., 2014 ; Tsundoda and Mendlinger, 2009 ). The crux of the findings of these studies suggests that negative impacts should not be overlooked while establishing/expanding tourism industry at a destination.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%