Pro-Poor Tourism: Association With Development Activities, Sustainability, And Benefiting Local and Poor Population
Tourism is an effective tool of achieving development, especially in developing nations, and poor and remote communities. This is possible if governments, non-governmental, and private institutions involved in tourism engage poor and local communities in tourism activities, through pro-poor tourism strategies. Pro-poor tourism strategies, which can alleviate poverty and encourage development include unlocking opportunities in the tourism sector for the poor. This entails the expansion of employment and business activities, provision of training, and addressing the negative environmental and social impact of tourism. The research finds evidence that pro-poor tourism enables sustainable development and the conservation of social-cultural and environmental resources. Overall, pro-poor tourism promotes development at the community level through infrastructure and economic development and promotion of social amenities.
Pro-Poor Tourism in Development and Sustainability
Introduction
Private, non-governmental, government, and international organizations are increasingly paying attention to the concept that tourism can be a tool of poverty alleviation. According to the UN world Tourism Organization, tourism is the top job creator in the world and leading export sector, especially in developing nations, where it has the potential to assist in the achievement of millennium development goals (Spenceley, Habyalimana, Tusabe, & Mariza, 2010). Proponents for tourism reason that poor communities can benefit from infrastructure and services developed and provided for tourists like communication, roads, sanitation, and health services. The linkage of poverty eradication and millennium development goals led to the emergence of "pro-poor tourism" theory (Harrison, 2008). Pro-poor tourism is catching in across the globe leading to a need to investigate the applicability of the concept.
The concept is spearheaded by a partnership between the UK-based pro-poor tourism agency, the ICRT, the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), and the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) (Harrison, 2008). This research investigates the concept of pro-poor tourism in terms of the use of the term pro-poor and its differentiation from economic development. This research will begin by describing the concept and theory behind "pro-poor tourism," by trying to define, describe, and create a theoretical basis for the idea. This is followed by an evaluation of the theory in terms of poverty eradication, contribution to sustainable development, and the benefits to poor communities. The research will make use of real examples of the use of pro-poor tourism from different parts of the world to reveal its positive and negative impact among communities. In addition, focus is placed on the participation of local communities in pro-poor tourism efforts and debates.
In tourism, pro-poor tourism is contrasted and often confused with poverty tourism. Pro-poor tourism is a concept created and forwarded by Deloitte and Touche in "On sustainable Tourism and Poverty Eradication," and commissioned by the UK's Department for International Development. At the time, the goal was to maximize economic benefits from tourism by employment and micro-enterprises opportunities to alleviate poverty (O'Brien, 2011). At the same time, the report also indicated the negative impacts of tourism like environmental impact, social, and economic impact. The report indicated that tourism generated higher net benefits for the poor than costs. This saw the beginning of the pro-poor tourism concept as a tool for unlocking opportunities for poor communities by governments, rather than the expansion of the overall tourism sector. According to Nevin (2007), pro-poor tourism is a way of bringing the poor to tourism development in emerging or developing economies. Pro-poor tourism aims at putting "poverty at the heart of the tourism agenda and the pro-poor tourism partnership was formed to pursue this goal" (Nevin, 2007). Therefore, pro-poor tourism is a concept that is focused at the micro-level of the economy and society and is applied to all forms of tourism, including mainstream tourism.
Tourism as an industry is believed by international, government, and non-governmental organizations as a potential tool in poverty eradication. This is because the travel and tourism sector in the world is the fastest and largest growing industry, with an average growth of 7% per annum in the last decade (Marx, 2011). The forecasts by the United Nations World Tourism Organization are that tourism significantly contributes to the global economy, and is expected to rise to $2 trillion by 2020, with $1.6 billion international tourists visiting different parts of the world (Marx, 2011). In addition, the World Travel & Tourism Council predicted that tourism and travel industry would be one of the fastest growing industries in the world between 2011 and 2021, creating 66 million jobs and creating 9.6% of the GDP (Leclercq...
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