Celeste EusébioArmando Luís VieiraSara Lima
A clear understanding of residents' attitudes towards tourism development and its determinants is a crucial pillar for designing tourism development strategies to promote sustainable development. The literature on the influence of host–tourist interactions and place attachment on residents' attitudes towards tourism development in developing countries is still scarce. To extend knowledge in this field, this study aims at developing and testing a structural model to examine direct and indirect causal effects of place attachment, host–tourist interaction, and perceived positive and negative tourism impacts on the residents' attitudes towards tourism development in an island tourism destination – Boa Vista Island in Cape Verde. Results suggest that the residents' attitudes are positively affected by place attachment, host–tourist interaction, and perceived positive impacts; and negatively affected by perceived negative impacts. Host–tourist interaction emerges as the strongest (direct and indirect) determinant of the residents' attitudes towards tourism development. Moreover, although both positive and negative perceptions of tourism impacts have significant impacts on the residents' attitudes, the influence of the former is stronger than that of the latter. The paper ends with relevant theoretical and practical implications to promote positive residents' attitudes towards tourism development in Boa Vista.
Foad IraniAli ÖztürenArash Akhshik
Foad IraniAli ÖztürenArash Akhshik
Manuel Alector RibeiroPatrícia Oom do ValleJoão Albino Silva
N.G. FernandesElaine Scalabrini
Sandra María Sánchez CañizaresAna María Castillo Canalejo