An examination of residents’ support for hunting as a tourism product
✍ Scribed by Kelly J. MacKay; J. Michael Campbell
- Book ID
- 104314682
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 173 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0261-5177
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
As new forms of special interest tourism are developed and continue to expand, more traditional tourism activities, such as hunting, are in decline. Public perceptions about hunting have the potential to alter or cease some of these traditional tourism activities. Understanding resident perceptions of and support for hunting when it is a major tourism product for a destination is necessary to engender support for the activity and maintain its tourism profile and important economic contribution. A provincewide survey was conducted that examined residents' attitudes and normative influences toward hunting as a tourism product. Results from over 1300 respondents suggested that residents have a slightly positive attitude toward hunting when it is for tourism and economic purposes. Although referent groups were less influential than residents' attitudes in predicting support for hunting, businesses that benefit from hunting-based tourism were viewed as more influential than the tourists themselves. Results are discussed according to residents' level of support for hunting (high, medium, low) and indicate the underlying beliefs that drive their respective attitudinal and social influences. Implications for marketing and communication are provided.
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The far North West of Scotland may be viewed as peripheral in European and UK terms. It has many characteristics associated with remote locations: rural depopulation, marginal economies, high quality natural environment, and cultures in transition from traditional to modern. Tourism is an important