Tourism Concessionaires: An exploratory study of concessionaires who actively contribute to conservation in New Zealand Research Completed
Title
Tourism Concessionaires: An exploratory study of concessionaires who actively contribute to conservation in New Zealand
Lead Author
Thompson, A
Organisation(s)
Lincoln University, Department of Conservation
Publication Year
2005
Publisher
Lincoln University
Contacts
Roger Dawson, Research Collections Librarian, Lincoln University: roger.dawson@lincoln.ac.nz
www.lincoln.ac.nz/Research-Centres/LEaP/Tourism-Business–Communities/
Abstract
Tourism is very focused on the natural environment in New Zealand and public conservation lands have been recognised as a vital component of the tourism product. However, does conservation in New Zealand, particularly the work of the Department of Conservation, need tourism? If so, do tourism operators contribute to conservation goals and can others be encouraged to do the same? This research examines seven concessionaires who actively contribute to conservation in New Zealand. The purpose of the study is to, firstly, find out what conservation actions these concessionaires undertake and, secondly, to understand the motives of operators and why they are participating in conservation.
This research serves two purposes. It is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for a Masters of Applied Science and to complete a Department of Conservation project on the same topic. Qualitative research techniques were chosen for this study because they enable the researcher to explore a phenomenon about which little is known. The exploratory nature of the study required a degree of flexibility in the research approach to enable the researcher to delve into complex processes. Case studies of each concessionaire and their conservation actions are presented.
The motives of why operators participate in conservation are analysed from a demand (visitor), supply (business) and ethical perspective. The findings revealed that there are a wide range of motivations that explain why operators participate in conservation. However the key finding from this study is that while there were extrinsic and pragmatic demand and supply rationale motivating conservation actions, the most common and consistent motives were intrinsic and driven by the operators’ own individual environmental ethic. The environmental ethic was reinforced by the environmental conscience of visitors, the values of staff and the benefits that these actions could provide to the business.
Keywords:
Conservation, Tourism, Concession, Interpretation, Values, Motivations, Tourism impact, Environment, National Parks, Commercial
How to access
For information on how to access the full text of this article, go to http://hdl.handle.net/10182/258 or contact your local or organisational library for assistance
Areas of Focus
Population Groups
Settings (location)
Provision (delivery type & infrastructure)
Topics
Barriers, Benefits, Delivery, Fees, charges, user pays, Financing / funding, Impacts - economic, Impacts - environmental, Impacts- social, Participation, Performance, Tourism
Views
1130
Added
June 21, 2012