Promoting residents’ happiness through a human-centric approach to tourism city development

IF 3 Q2 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Robertico Croes, Valeriya Shapoval, Manuel Rivera, Monika Bąk, Piotr Zientara
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

The study aims to delve into the influence of tourism on the happiness of city residents, grounded in the overarching concept of livability. It posits that prioritizing residents’ happiness is crucial for effectively addressing cities’ challenges in balancing development and distinctiveness. The study pursues three primary objectives: first, establishing a potential correlation between city tourism and residents’ happiness; second, examining the contributing factors to this correlation and third, identifying potential mediators that influence the connection between tourism development and residents’ happiness.

Design/methodology/approach

Using a quantitative single-case design and partial least square analysis, the study underscores the intricate nature of various tourism development components. It specifically explores the roles of cognitive flexibility and social comparison in shaping the relationship between city tourism and happiness.

Findings

The findings make a distinctive contribution by revealing that not all tourism domains contribute positively to happiness. Furthermore, it sheds light on how tourism development impacts the emotional and cognitive dimensions of happiness, emphasizing the adverse effects of inequality and feelings of insecurity.

Research limitations/implications

The study acknowledges certain constraints, including its employment of a cross-sectional design, the issue of generalizability, potential sampling bias and the reliance on subjective measurements when evaluating constructs like happiness and satisfaction with life. Using self-reported data introduces susceptibility to social desirability bias and individual perceptual differences, potentially resulting in measurement inaccuracies. Nevertheless, despite these limitations, the study’s findings offer valuable insights that contribute to both theoretical advancement and the realm of urban management.

Practical implications

The findings elucidated through the mediation analyses conducted for hypotheses three to seven shed light on the significant roles played by mental adaptation and social comparison mechanisms in shaping individuals’ happiness. These insights substantially enhance our understanding of this field. Particularly, the dimensions of social and environmental impact within tourism appear to counterbalance the positive effects stemming from the economic and cultural aspects. This suggests a scenario where an excessive focus on tourism development could potentially undermine the overall livability of the city. These outcomes further indicate the necessity for proactive interventions by destination managers. Their efforts should be directed toward enhancing the environmental and social domains, aiming to reinvigorate the sense of community among residents, which appears to be gradually waning.

Social implications

The outcomes of this study emphasize the utmost significance of prioritizing residents’ happiness above mere considerations of economic growth when formulating efficacious strategies for tourism. By concentrating on the happiness of the local population, a harmonious resonance is established with Sustainable Development Goal 11, which advocates for the creation of habitable cities founded upon the principle that “a city that is not good for its citizens is not good for tourists.” This alignment underscores the interconnected nature of residents’ happiness and the sustainable development of tourism. Moreover, residents’ happiness plays a pivotal role in addressing the challenge that cities face in harmonizing growth and their uniqueness, ensuring competitiveness and sustainability.

Originality/value

The research underscores the need for a people-oriented perspective in urban planning and tourism development initiatives. The study identifies diverse factors impacting residents’ happiness in city tourism, highlighting the complex interplay of environmental, cultural and socioeconomic elements. It emphasizes income’s role but underscores nonmaterial factors and individual preferences. Overall, the study offers timely and valuable insights into the intricate connection between tourism development, residents’ happiness, living conditions and human perception, guiding urban planners and stakeholders.

以人为本促进旅游城市发展,提升居民幸福感
目的 本研究旨在从宜居的总体概念出发,深入探讨旅游业对城市居民幸福感的影响。研究认为,优先考虑居民的幸福感对于有效应对城市在平衡发展和特色方面的挑战至关重要。本研究有三个主要目标:第一,建立城市旅游业与居民幸福感之间的潜在相关性;第二,研究这种相关性的促成因素;第三,确定影响旅游业发展与居民幸福感之间联系的潜在中介因素。设计/方法/途径本研究采用定量单案例设计和偏最小二乘法分析,强调旅游业发展各组成部分的复杂性。研究结果揭示了并非所有旅游领域都能对幸福感产生积极影响,从而做出了独特的贡献。此外,研究还揭示了旅游业发展如何影响幸福感的情感和认知维度,强调了不平等和不安全感的不利影响。研究局限性/影响研究承认存在一些限制因素,包括采用横截面设计、普遍性问题、潜在的抽样偏差以及在评估幸福感和生活满意度等构建时对主观测量的依赖。使用自我报告的数据容易产生社会期望偏差和个体感知差异,从而可能导致测量不准确。然而,尽管存在这些局限性,本研究的发现还是提供了有价值的见解,有助于理论的进步和城市管理领域的发展。实践意义通过对假设三至假设七进行中介分析得出的结果阐明了心理适应和社会比较机制在塑造个人幸福感方面所起的重要作用。这些见解大大加深了我们对这一领域的理解。特别是,旅游业的社会和环境影响似乎抵消了经济和文化方面的积极影响。这表明,过度关注旅游业发展可能会破坏城市的整体宜居性。这些结果进一步表明,目的地管理者有必要采取积极主动的干预措施。社会影响本研究的结果强调了在制定有效的旅游战略时,将居民的幸福感置于经济增长之上的极端重要性。通过关注当地居民的幸福感,与可持续发展目标 11 建立了和谐的共鸣,可持续发展目标 11 倡导在 "不利于市民的城市不利于游客 "的原则基础上创建宜居城市。这种一致性强调了居民幸福与旅游业可持续发展的相互关联性。此外,居民的幸福感在应对城市在协调发展与自身独特性、确保竞争力和可持续发展方面所面临的挑战方面发挥着关键作用。研究确定了影响居民在城市旅游中幸福感的各种因素,强调了环境、文化和社会经济要素之间复杂的相互作用。研究强调了收入的作用,但也强调了非物质因素和个人偏好。总之,本研究就旅游业发展、居民幸福感、生活条件和人类感知之间错综复杂的联系提供了及时而有价值的见解,为城市规划者和利益相关者提供了指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Tourism Cities
International Journal of Tourism Cities HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
11.50%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: A peer-reviewed journal, the International Journal of Tourism Cities provides an international forum for the critical study of urban tourism and tourism cities. The journal aims to be inter-disciplinary in its appreciation of tourism cities and tourism in urban areas, and welcomes original, theoretically-informed articles from those involved in the planning, management or marketing of tourism in city destination or places adjoining urban areas. Urban tourism and travel cover many disciplines and impinge on numerous aspects of daily life within cities. Moreover, they play a key role in domestic and international tourism in most countries, and cities often function as key travel gateways and tourism destinations. The International Journal of Tourism Cities contents include primary research articles, expert discussions on current urban tourism issues, and tourism city case studies. Articles are selected that are relevant to both academics and practitioners. The journal particularly encourages contributions on contemporary topics and issues in urban tourism including smart cities and tourism, environmental impact and sustainable tourism development in cities, citizen and stakeholder involvement in tourism, city destination governance, and the development of policies and standards for city tourism development. The International Journal of Tourism Cities has four distinct purposes: To encourage greater research and scholarship related to tourism in urban settings. To stimulate more interdisciplinary research on tourism in cities, particularly the integration of tourism and urban studies theories and principles. To generate more research studies on tourism at the edge of cities, where urban and rural areas converge. To create more literature on best practices in city tourism worldwide through in-depth analyses and the production of exemplary case studies.
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