Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons

This study combines three interconnected streams in tourism literature: analysis of the utilisation of common pool resources (CPR) in tourism, studies on sustainable tourism development and theoretical contributions to the articulation of roles, missions and strategies of a destination manage...

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Main Authors: João Romão, Mayumi Okada, Kazuo Machino, Peter Nijkamp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ERSA 2021-02-01
Series:REGION
Online Access:https://openjournals.wu.ac.at/ojs/index.php/region/article/view/286
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spelling doaj-d2f0224b73ef409f823c0a9c150d159c2021-03-02T14:07:15ZengERSAREGION2409-53702021-02-018110.18335/region.v8i1.286Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the CommonsJoão Romão0Mayumi Okada1Kazuo Machino2Peter Nijkamp3Yasuda Women's University, Hiroshima, JapanHokkaido University, Sapporo, JapanHokkaido University, Sapporo, JapanAI Cuza University, Iasi, Romania This study combines three interconnected streams in tourism literature: analysis of the utilisation of common pool resources (CPR) in tourism, studies on sustainable tourism development and theoretical contributions to the articulation of roles, missions and strategies of a destination management organisation (DMO). Starting from an integrative literature review, our aim is to explore the symbiotic relationships between these approaches in order to design a conceptual framework that opens new research opportunities. Clearly, the concrete application of such a conceptual model depends on the resources of each destination, the type of tourism dynamics observed, the specific stakeholders involved and the power balance between them. Our approach integrates the principles of sustainable development into the strategic role of a DMO through the management of CPR, aiming at the achievement of significant benefits for the host communities within the three pillars of sustainable development (ecological, social and economic) through participatory processes of destination management. In addition, we present an exploratory illustration of this conceptual framework for the case of a rural destination of Kushiro-Akan (Hokkaido, Japan). Policy and managerial implications are discussed, along with the needs for further research. https://openjournals.wu.ac.at/ojs/index.php/region/article/view/286
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author João Romão
Mayumi Okada
Kazuo Machino
Peter Nijkamp
spellingShingle João Romão
Mayumi Okada
Kazuo Machino
Peter Nijkamp
Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
REGION
author_facet João Romão
Mayumi Okada
Kazuo Machino
Peter Nijkamp
author_sort João Romão
title Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
title_short Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
title_full Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
title_fullStr Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
title_full_unstemmed Destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the Commons
title_sort destination management and sustainable development through the common lens of the commons
publisher ERSA
series REGION
issn 2409-5370
publishDate 2021-02-01
description This study combines three interconnected streams in tourism literature: analysis of the utilisation of common pool resources (CPR) in tourism, studies on sustainable tourism development and theoretical contributions to the articulation of roles, missions and strategies of a destination management organisation (DMO). Starting from an integrative literature review, our aim is to explore the symbiotic relationships between these approaches in order to design a conceptual framework that opens new research opportunities. Clearly, the concrete application of such a conceptual model depends on the resources of each destination, the type of tourism dynamics observed, the specific stakeholders involved and the power balance between them. Our approach integrates the principles of sustainable development into the strategic role of a DMO through the management of CPR, aiming at the achievement of significant benefits for the host communities within the three pillars of sustainable development (ecological, social and economic) through participatory processes of destination management. In addition, we present an exploratory illustration of this conceptual framework for the case of a rural destination of Kushiro-Akan (Hokkaido, Japan). Policy and managerial implications are discussed, along with the needs for further research.
url https://openjournals.wu.ac.at/ojs/index.php/region/article/view/286
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