SOCIAL NETWORKING TECHNOLOGIES AND THE MORAL ECONOMY OF ALTERNATIVE TOURISM: THE CASE OF COUCHSURFING.ORG

Abstract The purpose of this study is to examine the role social networking technologies play in the moral economy of alternative tourism. The study takes as its empirical focus the online hospitality exchange network Couchsurfing. Using the concept of ‘moral affordances’, the analysis outlines the way Couchsurfing’s technical systems, software design, and search algorithms enable participants to engage in a moral economy based on the non-commodified provision of accommodation to strangers and personal relations of trust and intimacy. Findings suggest that these affordances are not isolated effects of the technologies themselves, but rather reflect a broader moral landscape in which alternative tourism is performed.

[1]  S. Wearing,et al.  Gap year volunteer tourism: Myths of Global Citizenship? , 2012 .

[2]  Laurie Murphy Exploring social interactions of backpackers , 2001 .

[3]  J. Ritchie,et al.  Tourism: Principles, Practices, Philosophies , 1990 .

[4]  Rebecca Eynon,et al.  The Ethics of Internet Research , 2008 .

[5]  A. Standish The Moralization of Tourism: Sun, Sand … and Saving the World? , 2005 .

[6]  J. Palfrey,et al.  Born digital: understanding the first generation of digital natives , 2009, Choice Reviews Online.

[7]  Christopher R Gibson,et al.  Geographies of tourism: (un)ethical encounters , 2010 .

[8]  Joshua Fogel,et al.  Internet social network communities: Risk taking, trust, and privacy concerns , 2009, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[9]  P. Tsatsou,et al.  Digital divides revisited: what is new about divides and their research? , 2011 .

[10]  M. Conran They really love me!: Intimacy in Volunteer Tourism , 2011 .

[11]  Dennis Zuev,et al.  Couchsurfing as a spatial practice: accessing and producing xenotopos. , 2012 .

[12]  R. Duffy,et al.  The Ethics of Tourism Development , 2003 .

[13]  A. McIntosh,et al.  A Cultural Encounter through Volunteer Tourism: Towards the Ideals of Sustainable Tourism? , 2007 .

[14]  B. Adkins,et al.  Backpackers as a Community of Strangers: The Interaction Order of an Online Backpacker Notice Board , 2007, Qualitative Sociology Review.

[15]  Paula Bialski,et al.  Technologies of hospitality: how planned encounters develop between strangers. , 2012 .

[16]  O. Rantala TOURIST PRACTICES IN THE FOREST , 2010 .

[17]  D. Lisle Joyless Cosmopolitans: The Moral Economy of Ethical Tourism , 2010 .

[18]  Alison Hearn,et al.  Structuring feeling: Web 2.0, online ranking and rating, and the digital 'reputation' economy , 2010 .

[19]  Kevin Crowston,et al.  ICIS 2008 Proceedings , 2008 .

[20]  C. O'reilly,et al.  From drifter to gap year tourist: Mainstreaming backpacker travel. , 2006 .

[21]  G. Richards,et al.  Developing creativity in tourist experiences: A solution to the serial reproduction of culture? , 2006 .

[22]  Jonas Larsen,et al.  Performing Tourist Places , 2004 .

[23]  E. Cohen Alternative tourism - a critique. , 1987 .

[24]  J. Anderson Talking whilst walking: a geographical archaeology of knowledge , 2004 .

[25]  J. Gibson The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception , 1979 .

[26]  Debra Lauterbach,et al.  Surfing a Web of Trust: Reputation and Reciprocity on CouchSurfing.com , 2009, 2009 International Conference on Computational Science and Engineering.

[27]  G. Marcus Ethnography through Thick and Thin , 2021 .

[28]  Ben Light,et al.  More Than Just Friends? Facebook, Disclosive Ethics and the Morality of Technology , 2008, ICIS.

[29]  E. Jones,et al.  Lifestyle Movements: Exploring the Intersection of Lifestyle and Social Movements , 2012 .

[30]  Y. Enoch,et al.  Blogs of Israeli and Danish backpackers to India , 2010 .

[31]  Howard Rheingold,et al.  The Virtual Community: Finding Commection in a Computerized World , 1993 .

[32]  J. Butcher The Moralisation of Tourism: Sun, Sand... and Saving the World? , 2002 .

[33]  E. Wilson,et al.  Reflecting upon slow travel and tourism experiences , 2012 .

[34]  Peter B. White,et al.  Home and away: Tourists in a Connected World , 2007 .

[35]  K. Andereck,et al.  Volunteer tourism and the “voluntoured”: the case of Tijuana, Mexico , 2009 .

[36]  S. Wearing,et al.  Slow'n down the town to let nature grow: ecotourism, social justice and sustainability , 2012 .

[37]  Cody Morris Paris Flashpackers: an emerging sub-culture? , 2012 .

[38]  Brian P. Bloomfield,et al.  Bodies, Technologies and Action Possibilities , 2010 .

[39]  D. Maccannell The Ethics of Sightseeing , 2011 .

[40]  Gordon R Waitt,et al.  Listening and tourism studies , 2010 .

[41]  J. Hultsman Just tourism: An ethical framework , 1995 .

[42]  Paula Bialski,et al.  Becoming Intimately Mobile , 2012 .

[43]  De-Jung Chen,et al.  Global concept, local practice: Taiwanese experience of CouchSurfing , 2012 .

[44]  D. Norman The psychology of everyday things , 1990 .

[45]  K. Boluk Fair Trade Tourism South Africa: consumer virtue or moral selving? , 2011 .

[46]  Z. Bauman,et al.  Liquid Modernity@@@Liquid Love: On the Frailty of Human Bonds , 2005 .

[47]  J. Dickinson,et al.  Slow Travel and Tourism , 2010 .

[48]  G. Evans,et al.  Fair trade in tourism—community development or marketing tool? , 2002 .

[49]  Fabiola Baltar,et al.  Social research 2.0: virtual snowball sampling method using Facebook , 2012, Internet Res..

[50]  Giovanna Mascheroni,et al.  Global Nomads' Network and Mobile Sociality: Exploring New Media Uses on the Move , 2007 .

[51]  Rachel Botsman,et al.  What's Mine Is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption , 2010 .

[52]  D. Boorstin The image : a guide to pseudo-events in America , 1992 .

[53]  L. Turner The golden hordes , 1976 .

[54]  Jennie Germann Molz,et al.  Travel Connections: Tourism, Technology and Togetherness in a Mobile World , 2012 .

[55]  Harng Luh Sin Who are we responsible to? Locals' tales of volunteer tourism , 2010 .

[56]  C. A. Santos,et al.  Social change, discourse and volunteer tourism , 2005 .

[57]  G. Ritzer “McDisneyization” and “Post-Tourism:” Complementary Perspectives on Contemporary Tourism , 1998 .

[58]  S. Wearing Volunteer Tourism: Experiences that Make a Difference , 2001 .

[59]  Sonja Buchberger Hospitality, secrecy and gossip in Morocco: hosting CouchSurfers against great odds. , 2012 .

[60]  Paul Resnick,et al.  Reputation systems , 2000, CACM.

[61]  Natasha Whiteman,et al.  Undoing Ethics: Rethinking Practice in Online Research , 2012 .

[62]  Jonas Larsen,et al.  Practices and Flows of Digital Photography: An Ethnographic Framework , 2008 .

[63]  Vicky Steylaerts,et al.  Couchsurfing and authenticity: notes towards an understanding of an emerging phenomenon. , 2012 .

[64]  A. Spenceley Responsible Tourism: Critical Issues for Conservation and Development , 2012 .

[65]  R. Buckley A framework for ecotourism , 1994 .

[66]  A. Sinervo Connection and Disillusion: The Moral Economy of Volunteer Tourism in Cusco, Peru , 2011 .