Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions

Sustainable tourism is now a widely used paradigm in both tourism research and tourism industry, aiming at balancing the economic, environmental, and socio-cultural aspects of tourism development (Mihalic, 2020). However, usually the environmental dimension is the most adopted from the supply side a...

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Main Authors: D'Acunto David, Lonardi Serena, Confente Ilenia, Raggiotto Francesco
Other Authors: D. Gursoy, S. Volo, M. Tuna, D'Acunto, David Maria, Lonardi, Serena, Confente, Ilenia, Raggiotto, Francesco
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: country:TUR 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143487
https://mtcon.org/mtcon-2024/
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author D'Acunto David
Lonardi Serena
Confente Ilenia
Raggiotto Francesco
author2 D. Gursoy, S. Volo, M. Tuna
D'Acunto, David Maria
Lonardi, Serena
Confente, Ilenia
Raggiotto, Francesco
author_facet D'Acunto David
Lonardi Serena
Confente Ilenia
Raggiotto Francesco
author_sort D'Acunto David
collection Unknown
description Sustainable tourism is now a widely used paradigm in both tourism research and tourism industry, aiming at balancing the economic, environmental, and socio-cultural aspects of tourism development (Mihalic, 2020). However, usually the environmental dimension is the most adopted from the supply side and is the most well recognized by visitors (e.g. Confente & Scarpi, 2021). The socio-cultural dimension is rapidly assuming momentum as well, particularly when it comes to considering destinations struggling with overtourism (Helgadóttir et al., 2019; Mihalic, 2020). In this vein, sustainability research in tourism has been increasingly focused on social issues, mainly exploring the perspective of residents (e.g. Scarpi et al., 2022), host communities (Zhang et al., 2017) or small tourism enterprises (Zhang & Zhang, 2018); notably, the tourist perspective has been neglected in extant literature on the social dimension (Aydın & Alvarez, 2020). Hence, despite a few exceptions encompassing the three dimensions of sustainability for tourism, there is a need for more research including the socio-cultural dimension together with the well explored environmental one, as perceived by tourists. Tourist social responsibility awareness is defined as the responsibilities of tourists in protecting and improving the socio-cultural interests of a visited destination (Luo et al., 2020; Agapito et al., 2023). An example of socially responsible tourists includes the following review snippet: The guide was a true expert and Island native. I loved going to the new Viking exhibit and hearing about the traditions of this wonderful community! My whole family enjoyed the tour. Tourists can significantly contribute in such direction by behaving socially and environmentally responsibly, thus being actively involved in the multidimensional sustainability of tourism destinations (Ferrari et al., 2021). In addition, tourists’ perceptions of the social and environmental sustainability of the destination are fundamental to loyalty and ...
format Conference Object
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
geographic Alvarez
geographic_facet Alvarez
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-64.483,-64.483,-65.633,-65.633)
op_collection_id ftunivveronairis
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-605-254-961-2
ispartofbook:MTCON ’24 Proceedings
Managing Tourism Across Continents (MTCON)
firstpage:65
lastpage:69
numberofpages:5
alleditors:D. Gursoy, S. Volo, M. Tuna
https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143487
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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spelling ftunivveronairis:oai:iris.univr.it:11562/1143487 2025-06-15T14:30:55+00:00 Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions D'Acunto David Lonardi Serena Confente Ilenia Raggiotto Francesco D. Gursoy, S. Volo, M. Tuna D'Acunto, David Maria Lonardi, Serena Confente, Ilenia Raggiotto, Francesco 2024 ELETTRONICO https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143487 https://mtcon.org/mtcon-2024/ eng eng country:TUR info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-605-254-961-2 ispartofbook:MTCON ’24 Proceedings Managing Tourism Across Continents (MTCON) firstpage:65 lastpage:69 numberofpages:5 alleditors:D. Gursoy, S. Volo, M. Tuna https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143487 info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess socio-cultural sustainability UGC overtourism text analytics TripAdvisor info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2024 ftunivveronairis 2025-05-29T04:48:16Z Sustainable tourism is now a widely used paradigm in both tourism research and tourism industry, aiming at balancing the economic, environmental, and socio-cultural aspects of tourism development (Mihalic, 2020). However, usually the environmental dimension is the most adopted from the supply side and is the most well recognized by visitors (e.g. Confente & Scarpi, 2021). The socio-cultural dimension is rapidly assuming momentum as well, particularly when it comes to considering destinations struggling with overtourism (Helgadóttir et al., 2019; Mihalic, 2020). In this vein, sustainability research in tourism has been increasingly focused on social issues, mainly exploring the perspective of residents (e.g. Scarpi et al., 2022), host communities (Zhang et al., 2017) or small tourism enterprises (Zhang & Zhang, 2018); notably, the tourist perspective has been neglected in extant literature on the social dimension (Aydın & Alvarez, 2020). Hence, despite a few exceptions encompassing the three dimensions of sustainability for tourism, there is a need for more research including the socio-cultural dimension together with the well explored environmental one, as perceived by tourists. Tourist social responsibility awareness is defined as the responsibilities of tourists in protecting and improving the socio-cultural interests of a visited destination (Luo et al., 2020; Agapito et al., 2023). An example of socially responsible tourists includes the following review snippet: The guide was a true expert and Island native. I loved going to the new Viking exhibit and hearing about the traditions of this wonderful community! My whole family enjoyed the tour. Tourists can significantly contribute in such direction by behaving socially and environmentally responsibly, thus being actively involved in the multidimensional sustainability of tourism destinations (Ferrari et al., 2021). In addition, tourists’ perceptions of the social and environmental sustainability of the destination are fundamental to loyalty and ... Conference Object Iceland Unknown Alvarez ENVELOPE(-64.483,-64.483,-65.633,-65.633)
spellingShingle socio-cultural sustainability
UGC
overtourism
text analytics
TripAdvisor
D'Acunto David
Lonardi Serena
Confente Ilenia
Raggiotto Francesco
Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title_full Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title_fullStr Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title_full_unstemmed Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title_short Which Dimension of Sustainability Matter for Visitors? An eWOM Analysis of Iceland Attractions
title_sort which dimension of sustainability matter for visitors? an ewom analysis of iceland attractions
topic socio-cultural sustainability
UGC
overtourism
text analytics
TripAdvisor
topic_facet socio-cultural sustainability
UGC
overtourism
text analytics
TripAdvisor
url https://hdl.handle.net/11562/1143487
https://mtcon.org/mtcon-2024/