ENTER 2015 Research Track Slide Number 1 The Rise of eTourism for Development Alessandro Inversini*, Isabella Rega*, Isabella Nunes Pereira** and Roberto Bartholo** *Bournemouth University, UK **Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro , Brasil [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]http://www.bournemouth.ac.uk, http://www.ufrj.br
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
ENTER 2015 Research Track Slide Number 1
The Rise of eTourism for Development
Alessandro Inversini*, Isabella Rega*, Isabella Nunes Pereira** and Roberto Bartholo**
• Tourism is considered as potential strategic factor for economic growth (Sinclair and Stabler, 2002).
• Tourism has a general positive impact on the development of rural economies (Cánoves and Blanco, 2004)
• Tourism generates new businesses, improves infrastructures and services, fosters preservation of the natural environment/ landscapes and helps with economic diversification (Herrero and San Martín, 2012; Wang and Pfister, 2008).
• Tourism is an economic driving force in many developing countries as it substantially contributes to the GDPs of many emerging economies (Sireyjol, 2010).
– from the roughly 9% in Ethiopia or Senegal – to 25% in Mauritius
BUT what is the real contribution of tourism to development and especially to socio-economic
• Exploitative tourism was historically challenged (Krippendorf, 1987) and alternative forms thus arose with a renewed focus on local sustainability and community development.
• growing demand for products and services that are more sustainable, pro-poor, and less harmful to local environments and communities (Callanan & Thomas, 2005).
• Community Based Tourism (Murphy 1985; Simpson, 2008) that is a bottom up approach to involve community in the creation and execution of tourism products (Sebele, 2010).
• The advent of the internet produced a paradigm shift in the industry thanks to the convergence among informatics, communication, and multimedia (Buhalis 2003).
• The access to these peripheral areas is often problematic both physically and electronically (Hall and Page 2006).
• SMTEs needs to develop their “virtual size” thus marketing and selling their services to the global markets (Spencer et al., 2012).
• Information and Communication for Development is a relatively new field of study (Unwin, 2009; Heeks, 2010)
• The underpinning is that access to digital technology can promote social and economic development (Rega et al., 2013).
• Micro-small and medium size enterprises as unit of analysis (Heeks, 2010), in order to understand the role of ICT in development (Kleine and Unwin, 2009).
• The Community Base Tourism perspective (Murphy, 1985; Simpson, 2008; Sebele 2010) where tourism is driven by the local community with a bottom up approach leading to socio-economic development (Lea, 1988);
• The disruptive rise of ICTs and the internet in the field of tourism and its the impact on the marketing (Buhalis, 2003) and selling power (Law 2009) of the travel and tourism operators;
• The increasing importance of technologies within development studies field (ICT4D – Unwin 2009), which are operating as a paradigm shift also at micro and small firm level (Heeks 2010).
“The choice of tourism was a matter of social justice more than driven by personal motivations. […] I saw that the exploitation of external entities [i.e. travel agencies] was not converted in a social return for the slum,
and this made me decide [for tourism] (Rocinha Original Tour).
Main Impacts•employment of new people •using products bought locally •tourists spend their money
Most importantly tourism is helping in fostering relation between tourists, the environment and the local community
“Clients love it [Rocinha], they post in facebook that they love it because they feel at home. […] In Rocinha tourists love these things, the culture, the place, our welcoming attitude […]and
tourists when arrive here feel welcomed by the local people.[…] Here is plenty of human warmth.” (Hostel Rocinha)
“[Tourism] is good for the local economy, but also because you can meet people from other countries. You, without travelling
outside the country, are meeting and knowing a bit of each person [coming], of each place in the world, and this is interesting.” (Hostel