2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2017.07.015
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Towards a Model of Travel Fear

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Cited by 93 publications
(81 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
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“…This research heeds the call for future research on tourism in risk and uncertainty in times of crisis and disasters, by Ritchie and Jiang (2019). We contribute to research on mortality threats and tourism (Fennell, 2017;Oren, Shani, & Poria, 2019;Ulqinaku & Sarial-Abi, 2020) and tourism, by showing that interactive tours are preferred when experiencing mortality threats, especially for individuals who consider technological adoption important to their self-esteem. Contributing to previous research on the effects of crises on tourism (Cró & Martins, 2017), we suggest one way to address threatened tourists.…”
Section: Theoretical Contributionsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This research heeds the call for future research on tourism in risk and uncertainty in times of crisis and disasters, by Ritchie and Jiang (2019). We contribute to research on mortality threats and tourism (Fennell, 2017;Oren, Shani, & Poria, 2019;Ulqinaku & Sarial-Abi, 2020) and tourism, by showing that interactive tours are preferred when experiencing mortality threats, especially for individuals who consider technological adoption important to their self-esteem. Contributing to previous research on the effects of crises on tourism (Cró & Martins, 2017), we suggest one way to address threatened tourists.…”
Section: Theoretical Contributionsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…With respect to tourism, Giusti and Raya (2019) stated the major risks for visitors include health issues, crime, political issues and natural disasters. Additionally, Fennell (2017) concluded that factors and states regarding fear of travel are shock, panic, risk, worry, and anxiety. Concerning health concerns, the impact of fear arousal related to COVID-19 on domestic tourists' behavior has not been examined yet, however, several tourism studies articulated that risk perception substantially impacted travelers’ intentions to visit a destination (e.g.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, Karafillakis and Larson (2017) make no differentiation between the terms ‘risk’ and ‘uncertainty,’ ‘fear,’ ‘worry’ and ‘anxiety’ using them interchangeably in their study, which is quite problematic. Research in psychology indicates that despite their similarities and relationships, they have subtle differences, which must be recognized ( Fennell, 2017 ). We stick to the term vaccination concern and operationalize it as apprehensions that people hold about travel vaccination, which are either perceptual, real or a combination of these, potentially limiting them from embracing vaccines wholeheartedly.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%