4.6 Article

Stakeholders' Perception on the Impacts of Tourism on Mass Destinations: The Case of Seville

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13168768

Keywords

tourism impact; mass destinations; stakeholders' perception; tourism changes; sustainability

Funding

  1. project, Overtourism in Spanish coastal destinations. Tourism degrowth strategies an approach from the social dimension - Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (National Plan for I+D+i) [RTI2018-094844-B-C33]
  2. Spanish State Research Agency
  3. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)

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Stakeholders' participation is crucial for implementing sustainable development models at mass tourism destinations. This study analyzed the perceptions of residents, accommodation establishments, the academic community, and tourists in Seville to extract a definition of mass tourism. Findings indicate that while the majority acknowledge the presence of mass tourism in the city and view carrying capacity as a key factor for predicting this type of tourism, there is potential for transformation despite its unsustainable nature.
Stakeholders' participation is critical to implementing sustainable development models at mass tourism destinations. Through the application of a mixed methodology focused on the collection, processing, and analysis of quantitative and qualitative data, this study analyzes the perception of residents, accommodation establishments, the academic community, and tourists in the city of Seville, since they are the possible agents of change in the current model. In addition, the study of perceptions provides information to extract a definition of mass tourism for these groups. Findings show that the majority of those surveyed affirm the presence of mass tourism in the city, and choose carrying capacity as an instrument to predict this type of tourism. We also show that, while mass tourism is not a sustainable model, its transformation is possible. As a consequence, the tourists', destination's and local population's tolerance limits would determine the size and direction of the tourist impact.

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