TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluating residents’ perceptions of nature-based tourism with a factor-cluster approach
AU - Gu, Xiaoping
AU - Hunt, Carter A.
AU - Lengieza, Michael L.
AU - Niu, Lijun
AU - Wu, Huiwen
AU - Wang, Yue
AU - Jia, Xiang
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: This research was funded by Open Research Fund Program of Changbai-Mountain Academy of Sciences (Grant No. 2016009), the State Scholarship Fund of China (File No. 201808210449), National Fund Nurture Program of College of Economics and Management in SYAU (Grant No. JGPY20170302), and National Natural Science Foundation Youth Fund Program of China (Grant No. 31500386).
Funding Information:
This research was funded by Open Research Fund Program of Changbai-Mountain Academy of Sciences (Grant No. 2016009), the State Scholarship Fund of China (File No. 201808210449), National Fund Nurture Program of College of Economics and Management in SYAU (Grant No. JGPY20170302), and National Natural Science Foundation Youth Fund Program of China (Grant No. 31500386).
Funding Information:
Acknowledgments: The authors of this article would like to thank the collaboration of the Changbai Mountain Academy of Sciences for their help in carrying out this research. We also thank the Penn State University Office of Global Programs and Department of Recreation, Park, and Tourism Management, the Chinese Scholarship Council, as well as the College of Economics and Management of Shenyang Agricultural University, for supporting collaboration time amongst the authors. We are also grateful to three anonymous reviewers for helpful suggestions that we have incorporated into this article.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the authors. Li-censee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2021/1/1
Y1 - 2021/1/1
N2 - The purpose of the research presented here was to empirically assess resident perceptions of tourism development around the Changbai Mountain Biosphere Reserve (CMBR), a protected area straddling the China and North Korea border. Several theoretical approaches to the assessment of local resident attitudes towards tourism were reviewed and integrated into a novel factor-cluster assessment of residents in Erdaobaihe, the community most adjacent to CMBR. This analysis quanti-tatively grouped residents based on their perceptions of tourism’s economic, social, cultural, and environmental consequences for the town. An exploratory factor analysis of resident perceptual items first revealed six perception domains, and a subsequent cluster analysis then identified four distinct groups of residents based on these perceptions. A descriptive profile of each cluster and the significant differences among clusters are provided. Advancing our theoretical understanding of resident perspectives of tourism development, this cluster-based segmentation approach, demon-strated here, holds much promise for elaborating on the many ways that residents respond to new and long-standing forms of tourism in their communities. These theoretical and methodological contributions will be applicable to scholars as well as tourism practitioners and policy makers.
AB - The purpose of the research presented here was to empirically assess resident perceptions of tourism development around the Changbai Mountain Biosphere Reserve (CMBR), a protected area straddling the China and North Korea border. Several theoretical approaches to the assessment of local resident attitudes towards tourism were reviewed and integrated into a novel factor-cluster assessment of residents in Erdaobaihe, the community most adjacent to CMBR. This analysis quanti-tatively grouped residents based on their perceptions of tourism’s economic, social, cultural, and environmental consequences for the town. An exploratory factor analysis of resident perceptual items first revealed six perception domains, and a subsequent cluster analysis then identified four distinct groups of residents based on these perceptions. A descriptive profile of each cluster and the significant differences among clusters are provided. Advancing our theoretical understanding of resident perspectives of tourism development, this cluster-based segmentation approach, demon-strated here, holds much promise for elaborating on the many ways that residents respond to new and long-standing forms of tourism in their communities. These theoretical and methodological contributions will be applicable to scholars as well as tourism practitioners and policy makers.
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U2 - 10.3390/su13010199
DO - 10.3390/su13010199
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85098640254
SN - 2071-1050
VL - 13
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - Sustainability (Switzerland)
JF - Sustainability (Switzerland)
IS - 1
M1 - 199
ER -