Tourism communities and social ties: the role of online and offline tourist social networks in building social capital and sustainable practice
Tourism communities and social ties: the role of online and offline tourist social networks in building social capital and sustainable practice
Mobile connectivity enables the adoption of new ways to connect with social networks which are changing how we might, and could, seek support. In the tourism domain we increasingly blend online and offline presence to engage with social networks in the spatial location, at a distance and across time. This paper explores the forms of community that exist in physical tourism contexts, contexts not previously analysed through a community lens, and explores how mobile technology is creating connections within and beyond existing social networks. It examines how sustainable tourism can be enhanced by mobile connectivity through new space–time practices and using ephemeral interpersonal relationships to harness niche groups to create bottom-up social systems interested in sharing experiences, ideas and resources. Special attention is given to the concept of gelling socialities which proposes a less ridged network structure, and to the need to understand the increasingly liquid social dynamics of mobile social interactions. The paper adds to the theories surrounding community, social ties and tourism's value to society. It draws on data from in-depth interviews undertaken while designing and testing a collaborative travel app. It contributes to growing research into the new technologies increasingly available for sustainable tourism marketing and implementation.
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Dickinson, Janet E.
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Filimonau, Viachaslau
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Hibbert, Julia F.
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Cherrett, Tom
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Davies, Nigel
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Norgate, Sarah
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Speed, Chris
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Winstanley, Chris
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Dickinson, Janet E.
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Filimonau, Viachaslau
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Hibbert, Julia F.
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Cherrett, Tom
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Davies, Nigel
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Norgate, Sarah
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Speed, Chris
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Winstanley, Chris
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Dickinson, Janet E., Filimonau, Viachaslau, Hibbert, Julia F., Cherrett, Tom, Davies, Nigel, Norgate, Sarah, Speed, Chris and Winstanley, Chris
(2016)
Tourism communities and social ties: the role of online and offline tourist social networks in building social capital and sustainable practice.
Journal of Sustainable Tourism, .
(doi:10.1080/09669582.2016.1182538).
Abstract
Mobile connectivity enables the adoption of new ways to connect with social networks which are changing how we might, and could, seek support. In the tourism domain we increasingly blend online and offline presence to engage with social networks in the spatial location, at a distance and across time. This paper explores the forms of community that exist in physical tourism contexts, contexts not previously analysed through a community lens, and explores how mobile technology is creating connections within and beyond existing social networks. It examines how sustainable tourism can be enhanced by mobile connectivity through new space–time practices and using ephemeral interpersonal relationships to harness niche groups to create bottom-up social systems interested in sharing experiences, ideas and resources. Special attention is given to the concept of gelling socialities which proposes a less ridged network structure, and to the need to understand the increasingly liquid social dynamics of mobile social interactions. The paper adds to the theories surrounding community, social ties and tourism's value to society. It draws on data from in-depth interviews undertaken while designing and testing a collaborative travel app. It contributes to growing research into the new technologies increasingly available for sustainable tourism marketing and implementation.
Text
23_11_2016_Tourism co.pdf
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 18 April 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 August 2016
Organisations:
Transportation Group
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 403093
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/403093
ISSN: 0966-9582
PURE UUID: ea05b2ca-9f2e-432f-8410-87613308ab8c
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Date deposited: 23 Nov 2016 16:25
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:48
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Contributors
Author:
Janet E. Dickinson
Author:
Viachaslau Filimonau
Author:
Julia F. Hibbert
Author:
Nigel Davies
Author:
Sarah Norgate
Author:
Chris Speed
Author:
Chris Winstanley
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