4.6 Article

Indigenous tourism and cultural justice in a Tz'utujil Maya community, Guatemala

Journal

JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
Volume 29, Issue 2-3, Pages 214-233

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2020.1770771

Keywords

Indigenous tourism; authenticity; agency; cultural justice; ethnography; Guatemala

Funding

  1. Pennsylvania State University's Interinstitutional Center for Indigenous Knowledge
  2. M. G. Whiting Graduate Student Research Award
  3. Penn State College of Health and Human Development

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This study examines tourism in the Tz'utujil Maya community of Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala, using ethnographic interviewing and archival data to understand the connection between tourism and cultural justice. The research highlights the importance of local community perspectives in understanding Tz'utujil culture and emphasizes the significance of direct participation in tourism-related negotiations for cultural justice.
Despite explicit links to justice issues inherent in indigenous rights movements, little research has been undertaken to understand Indigenous Tourism from a justice perspective. This study employs ethnographic interviewing, participant observation, and archival data to study tourism in the Tz'utujil Maya community of Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala. Findings emphasize emic views of local community members that offer valuable insights for understanding justice as it relates to Tz'utujil culture. We argue that the loss of Indigenous culture, ways of living, and ways of knowing would almost certainly be hastened if tourism and the associated cultural valuation were not present. Furthermore, direct participation in negotiation on tourism related matters is a key principle to facilitate autonomy, agency, fairness and equity in cultural justice. Authenticity, similarly, is a negotiated concept, requiring direct participation to facilitate fairness and equity in cultural tourism, as seen being practiced by the Tz'utujil people. The cultural justice framing here makes a valuable contribution to recent writing in tourism studies on indigenous environmental justice.

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