4.6 Review

Rural tourism: A systematic literature review on definitions and challenges

Journal

JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM MANAGEMENT
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages 134-149

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhtm.2021.03.001

Keywords

Rural tourism; Definitions and challenges; Rurality; Systematic literature review; Developed countries; Developing countries

Funding

  1. Directorate General of Higher Education - Indonesian Ministry of Education and Culture
  2. Griffith Institute for Tourism (GIFT)

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This study explores the definitions and challenges of rural tourism in developed and developing countries, revealing key aspects such as location, sustainable development, community-based features, and experiences. Internal resource issues are identified as the greatest challenges for rural destinations, with external challenges being more prominent in developed countries. The mapping of current knowledge provides directions for future research and pandemic response in this field.
The definition of rural tourism remains unclear and only a few studies have mapped the current state of knowledge in this field. Through a systematic quantitative literature review, this study extends the previous literature by investigating rural tourism definitions and challenges faced within developed and developing contexts. The analysis of definitions reveals four key aspects of rural tourism that include location, sustainable development, community-based features, and experiences. While rural tourism in both developed and developing contexts emphasised location as a main defining characteristic, sustainable development and communitybased aspects appear prominently in the literature related to developing countries, and the experience dimension appears more frequently in the literature related to developed countries. The results suggest that rural destinations face internal and external challenges. The greatest challenges for developed and developing contexts arise from issues related to internal resources, although external challenges were found to be greater in developed contexts. The mapping of the current state of knowledge suggests several directions for future research in this domain, and response to the pandemic.

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