4.7 Article

Understanding residents' attitudes towards tourists: Connecting stereotypes, emotions and behaviours

Journal

TOURISM MANAGEMENT
Volume 89, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tourman.2021.104435

Keywords

Stereotypes; Emotions; Behaviours; Resident attitudes; Host-guest relations

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China [PolyU255017/16B]

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Understanding residents' attitudes towards tourists is crucial in tourism research, and this study presents a tripartite model connecting stereotypes, emotions, and behaviours of residents against tourists. The model highlights how stereotypes influence emotions and subsequently impact residents' behaviours towards tourists.
Understanding residents' attitudes towards tourists is an important area in tourism research as it is concerning host-guest interactions, tourists' experiences and destination images that influence sustainable tourism development. This research presents a tripartite model by connecting the interrelationships amongst stereotypes, emotions, and behaviours of residents against tourists. Data were collected via a multi-national sample of residents from Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand. The model highlights the influence of the four dimensions of stereotypes (i.e., approachable, competence, boastfulness, and rude) onto the elicitation of upwards assimilative or downwards contrastive emotions (e.g., admiration and contempt), which further cues residents' facilitative or harmful behaviours. The tripartite models enhance tourism knowledge on residents' attitudes and provides insights for tourism policymakers and destination management organizations (DMOs) on managing host-guest relations, such as enlisting residents as place ambassador and educate tourists to 'act-like-a-local' with destination norms.

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