{"title":"Chinese Tourism Growth to U.S. National Parks and Gateway Communities: A Case Study in West Yellowstone, Montana","authors":"Jennifer M. Thomsen, K. Tenney","doi":"10.18666/JPRA-2019-9548","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Chinese outbound tourism is one of the fastest growing industries worldwide, and with this growth, there has been a surge in international tourism to national parks. For example, 40% of Chinese travelers visited a national park during their U.S. travels (Office of Travel and Tourism Industries [OTTI], 2016). As one of the most popular national parks in the world, Yellowstone National Park (YELL) has swelled in Chinese visitation (Resource Systems Group [RSG], 2017). Despite positive economic aspects of increased tourism, parks and communities are faced with challenges that can impact management and the tourists’ experience. There is extremely limited research on Chinese tourism to U.S. national parks, and this study addresses these gaps through a case study in West Yellowstone, the most popular gateway community of YELL. Through over 50 interviews with Chinese tourists, tour operators, and local business owners, specifically, we aim to gain a greater understanding of: 1) Chinese travel trends and motivations for visiting national parks, 2) Chinese tourists’ perceptions of park resources, 3) Chinese tourists’ modes for communication and information exchange, and 4) perceptions and strategies implemented by businesses in gateway communities to adapt to Chinese tourism. Major findings of the study include that Chinese tourists at YELL primarily obtain their information from friends, family, and Chinese websites with limited tourists visiting or using the National Park Service (NPS) YELL website. Our findings suggest that national park and gateway community communications on social media apps such as WeChat are a major area for growth and opportunity. Finally, the gateway community of West Yellowstone is experiencing changes due to an influx of Chinese-owned businesses and tourists, and offer insight for how to adapt to change. This study addresses a largely understudied topic despite the growing trends of Chinese tourists to national parks and protected areas globally. The study’s findings will be of interest to other parks and protected areas around the world that are experiencing or are anticipating Chinese tourism growth, and offers implications for Chinese tourism communication and marketing outside the national park setting. Finally, our exploratory study presents an opportunity for researchers and practitioners to further study Chinese tourism to national parks and gateway communities in diverse settings, which can lead to comparability of findings and also support dialogue around tourism planning, marketing, communication for protected areas and their gateway communities. Subscribe to JPRA","PeriodicalId":223577,"journal":{"name":"The Journal of Park and Recreation Administration","volume":"20 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-05-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Journal of Park and Recreation Administration","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18666/JPRA-2019-9548","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
Chinese outbound tourism is one of the fastest growing industries worldwide, and with this growth, there has been a surge in international tourism to national parks. For example, 40% of Chinese travelers visited a national park during their U.S. travels (Office of Travel and Tourism Industries [OTTI], 2016). As one of the most popular national parks in the world, Yellowstone National Park (YELL) has swelled in Chinese visitation (Resource Systems Group [RSG], 2017). Despite positive economic aspects of increased tourism, parks and communities are faced with challenges that can impact management and the tourists’ experience. There is extremely limited research on Chinese tourism to U.S. national parks, and this study addresses these gaps through a case study in West Yellowstone, the most popular gateway community of YELL. Through over 50 interviews with Chinese tourists, tour operators, and local business owners, specifically, we aim to gain a greater understanding of: 1) Chinese travel trends and motivations for visiting national parks, 2) Chinese tourists’ perceptions of park resources, 3) Chinese tourists’ modes for communication and information exchange, and 4) perceptions and strategies implemented by businesses in gateway communities to adapt to Chinese tourism. Major findings of the study include that Chinese tourists at YELL primarily obtain their information from friends, family, and Chinese websites with limited tourists visiting or using the National Park Service (NPS) YELL website. Our findings suggest that national park and gateway community communications on social media apps such as WeChat are a major area for growth and opportunity. Finally, the gateway community of West Yellowstone is experiencing changes due to an influx of Chinese-owned businesses and tourists, and offer insight for how to adapt to change. This study addresses a largely understudied topic despite the growing trends of Chinese tourists to national parks and protected areas globally. The study’s findings will be of interest to other parks and protected areas around the world that are experiencing or are anticipating Chinese tourism growth, and offers implications for Chinese tourism communication and marketing outside the national park setting. Finally, our exploratory study presents an opportunity for researchers and practitioners to further study Chinese tourism to national parks and gateway communities in diverse settings, which can lead to comparability of findings and also support dialogue around tourism planning, marketing, communication for protected areas and their gateway communities. Subscribe to JPRA
中国出境游是世界上发展最快的行业之一,随着这种增长,前往国家公园的国际旅游人数激增。例如,40%的中国游客在美国旅行期间参观了国家公园(旅游和旅游业办公室,2016)。作为世界上最受欢迎的国家公园之一,黄石国家公园(YELL)的中国游客数量激增(Resource Systems Group [RSG], 2017)。尽管旅游业的增长带来了积极的经济方面,但公园和社区面临着可能影响管理和游客体验的挑战。关于中国游客到美国国家公园旅游的研究非常有限,本研究通过对西黄石公园(YELL最受欢迎的门户社区)的案例研究来解决这些空白。通过对中国游客、旅游经营者和当地企业主的50多次采访,我们的具体目标是更深入地了解:1)中国游客访问国家公园的趋势和动机,2)中国游客对公园资源的看法,3)中国游客的沟通和信息交流模式,以及4)门户社区企业为适应中国旅游而实施的看法和策略。该研究的主要发现包括,中国游客主要从朋友、家人和中国网站获取信息,只有少数游客访问或使用国家公园管理局(NPS)的网站。我们的研究结果表明,在微信等社交媒体应用程序上的国家公园和门户社区通信是一个主要的增长和机会领域。最后,由于中国企业和游客的涌入,西黄石的门户社区正在经历变化,并为如何适应变化提供了见解。尽管中国游客前往全球国家公园和保护区的趋势日益增长,但这项研究解决了一个在很大程度上未被充分研究的话题。研究结果将对世界上其他正在经历或预计中国游客增长的公园和保护区产生兴趣,并为中国在国家公园之外的旅游传播和营销提供启示。最后,我们的探索性研究为研究人员和从业者提供了一个机会,可以在不同的环境下进一步研究中国到国家公园和门户社区的旅游,这可以导致研究结果的可比性,并支持围绕保护区及其门户社区的旅游规划、营销和沟通进行对话。订阅JPRA