Literature profiling on tourism, impairment and disability issues: A future directional guide.

IF 1.3 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Tawanda Makuyana, Engelina du Plessis, Oliver Chikuta
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: South African tourism is evolving towards accommodating disabled people. Within the same standpoint, the country receives ageing tourists as a major international tourism market from the Global North, whose access needs are similar to disabled people. The present article explored 'blind and blank spots' in the extant literature on tourism-impairment disability as a synchronised field within academic research to provide theoretical insights and gaps for the disability-tourism research community to consider the composite concept instead of individualistic concepts.

Objective: The objectives were: (1) to track knowledge development from 1990 to 2018 using a narrative literature review approach and (2) to justify future research areas previously overlooked and understudied within a tourism-impairments-disability perspective in South Africa and beyond.

Method: A narrative literature review search strategy was used. Keywords and synonymous terms were used in electronic searches of Scopus, ScienceDirect, Sabinet Online, Emerald Insights Journals, African Journals and Google Scholar. The literature screening process used predetermined inclusion and exclusion criteria for the data source. Content thematic analysis was adopted for the present study.

Results: The findings reflect a dearth of tourism-impairments-disability research in South Africa. Nonetheless, there is an observable pattern of slow growth in research after the 2000s. The extant literature is skewed towards the tourism supply side and sporadic on tourism demand (tourist experiences), education and skills development.

Conclusions: It is clear that the absence of scientifically developed knowledge on disability-impairments-tourism affects inclusive tourism growth. Therefore, the research community should consider disability-inclusive (accessible) tourism management, human resources and marketing practices and knowledge for teaching material in future research.

Contribution: The article mapped and provided insights that sets a research agenda for tourism research community to see the gaps in literature and/or knowledge for accessible tourism (disability-inclusive) tourism to be a game changer as found by UNWTO (2020) with low-resources setting. Thereby setting a tone towards call for more research that can uncover an economic narrative that shows a relationship between skills development, labour and consumer markets for the participation of diverse disabled persons as such is shown as understudied in Low-to-Middle income earning countries like South Africa.

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Abstract Image

旅游、损伤和残疾问题的文献综述:未来方向指南。
背景:南非旅游业正朝着照顾残疾人的方向发展。从同样的角度来看,该国接受来自全球北方的老年游客作为一个主要的国际旅游市场,他们的访问需求与残疾人相似。本文将旅游损伤残障作为一个同步的学术研究领域,对现有文献中的“盲点和空白点”进行了探讨,为残障旅游研究界考虑复合概念而不是个体概念提供理论见解和空白。目的:研究的目标是:(1)使用叙述性文献综述方法跟踪1990年至2018年的知识发展情况;(2)从南非及其他地区的旅游损伤和残疾角度出发,为以前被忽视和研究不足的未来研究领域提供依据。方法:采用叙事文献检索策略。关键词和同义词用于Scopus、ScienceDirect、Sabinet Online、Emerald Insights Journals、African Journals和Google Scholar的电子搜索。文献筛选过程采用预先确定的数据源纳入和排除标准。本研究采用内容专题分析。结果:调查结果反映出南非缺乏对旅游损伤和残疾的研究。尽管如此,在21世纪后,研究出现了一种明显的缓慢增长模式。现有的文献偏向于旅游供给方面,而对旅游需求(旅游体验)、教育和技能发展的研究则零星存在。结论:很明显,缺乏科学发展的残障旅游知识影响了包容性旅游的增长。因此,在未来的研究中,研究界应考虑将残障包容(无障碍)旅游管理、人力资源和营销实践和知识作为教材。贡献:本文绘制并提供了见解,为旅游研究界制定了研究议程,以了解世界旅游组织(2020年)在低资源环境下发现的无障碍旅游(包容残疾人)旅游在文献和/或知识方面的差距。因此,为呼吁开展更多的研究奠定了基调,这些研究可以揭示一种经济叙事,表明技能发展、劳动力和各种残疾人参与的消费市场之间的关系,因为在南非等中低收入国家,对这种关系的研究不足。
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来源期刊
African Journal of Disability
African Journal of Disability HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
5.90%
发文量
50
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The African Journal of Disability, the official journal of CRS, AfriNEAD and CEDRES, introduce and discuss issues and experiences relating to and supporting the act of better understanding the interfaces between disability, poverty and practices of exclusion and marginalisation. Its articles yield new insight into established human development practices, evaluate new educational techniques and disability research, examine current cultural and social discrimination, and bring serious critical analysis to bear on problems shared across the African continent. Emphasis is on all aspects of disability particularity in the developing African context. This includes, amongst others: -disability studies as an emerging field of public health enquiry -rehabilitation, including vocational and community-based rehabilitation -community development and medical issues related to disability and poverty -disability-related stigma and discrimination -inclusive education -legal, policy, human rights and advocacy issues related to disability -the role of arts and media in relation to disability -disability as part of global Sustainable Development Goals transformation agendas -disability and postcolonial issues -globalisation and cultural change in relation to disability -environmental and climate-related issues linked to disability -disability, diversity and intersections of identity -disability and the promotion of human development.
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