Social conflict in communities impacted by tourism

This paper is based upon 12 months of ethnographic study while living among the Tuva and Kazakh people in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Based on observation, interviews, participation and secondary documents the paper uses Coser's theory of Social Conflict to suggest a four part model of how tourism engenders different forms of social conflict and fluctuating alliances between stakeholders in an environment where tourism has been introduced by agents external to the indigenous community. The actors are ethnic groupings and members of those groups, governmental officials at local, regional and national level, intermediaries of the tourism industry and private sector entrepreneurs drawn from the majority and minority ethnic groups. Tensions are identified as being based on beliefs, resources and power, and a sequential pattern of primacy is identified consistent with stages of the tourist area life cycle.

[1]  Zhaoping Yang,et al.  Minority community participation in tourism: A case of Kanas Tuva villages in Xinjiang, China , 2010 .

[2]  R. Butler,et al.  Tourism and indigenous peoples : issues and implications , 2007 .

[3]  C. Ryan Recreational Tourism: Demands and Impacts , 2003 .

[4]  D. Hager Introduction: Religious Conflict , 1956 .

[5]  E. Cashmore The Functions of Racial Conflict , 1990 .

[6]  Tim Oakes,et al.  Tourism and modernity in China , 1998 .

[7]  Valene L. Smith,et al.  Indigenous tourism: the four Hs , 1996 .

[8]  Erve Chambers Native Tours: The Anthropology of Travel and Tourism , 1999 .

[9]  H. Tucker Living with Tourism: Negotiating Identities in a Turkish Village , 2003 .

[10]  M. Freedman,et al.  The Functions of Social Conflict , 1959 .

[11]  C. Ryan,et al.  The impacts of tourism at a UNESCO heritage site in China – a need for a meta-narrative? The case of the Kaiping Diaolou , 2011 .

[12]  R. Shepherd Historicity, fieldwork, and the allure of the post-modern: a reply to Ryan and Gu. , 2011 .

[13]  R. Hitchcock,et al.  Tourism, Conservation, and Culture in the Kalahari Desert, Botswana , 1990 .

[14]  V. Smith,et al.  Tourism in Toraja (Sulawesi, Indonesia). , 1989 .

[15]  K. Hwang,et al.  Guanxi and Mientze: Conflict Resolution in Chinese Society , 1997 .

[16]  G. Simmel,et al.  Conflict and the Web of Group Affiliations , 1955 .

[17]  C. Ryan,et al.  The use of questionnaires in Chinese tourism research , 2012 .

[18]  Dina A. Zinnes,et al.  The integrative functions of conflict , 1960 .

[19]  Valene L. Smith,et al.  Hosts and Guests: The Anthropology of Tourism , 1978 .

[20]  Jingjing Yang Functions of social conflict in tourism: tourism’s impacts on the Kanas Tuva and Kazakh Settlements, Xinjiang, China , 2012, European Journal of Tourism Research.

[21]  D. Fisher The socio-economic consequences of tourism in Levuka, Fiji , 2000 .

[22]  Dianne Dredge Policy Networks and the local organisation of tourism , 2006 .

[23]  K. Haywood Tourism as a factor of change: A social cultural study , 1990 .

[24]  R. Butler The concept of a tourist area cycle of evolution: implications for management of resources. , 1980 .

[25]  V. Smith Eskimo tourism: micro-models and marginal men. , 1989 .

[26]  Maurice J. Meisner Leninism and Maoism: Some Populist Perspectives in Marxism-Leninism in China , 1971, The China Quarterly.

[27]  C. Ryan,et al.  Chapter 6 – The market perspective of indigenous tourism: opportunities for business development , 2007 .

[28]  M. Robinson,et al.  Tourism and Cultural Conflicts , 1998 .

[29]  R. Posner Utilitarianism, Economics, and Legal Theory , 1979, The Journal of Legal Studies.

[30]  C. Ryan,et al.  Political connections, guanxi and adoption of CSR policies in the Chinese hotel industry: Is there a link? , 2013 .

[31]  Icinqsley Laffer. THE FOUNDATIONS OF WELFARE ECONOMICS , 1951 .

[32]  Stanley W. Toops Tourism in Xinjiang, China , 1992 .

[33]  Vladimir Arzenšek A “Conflict Model” and the Structure of Yugoslav Society , 1972 .

[34]  A. Inkeles,et al.  International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. , 1968 .

[35]  Richard A. Posner,et al.  Cost‐Benefit Analysis: Definition, Justification, and Comment on Conference Papers , 2000, The Journal of Legal Studies.

[36]  A. Oberschall Theories of Social Conflict , 1978 .

[37]  Alison J. McIntosh,et al.  Tourists' appreciation of Maori culture in New Zealand , 2004 .

[38]  Xianghong Feng Who Benefits?: Tourism Development in Fenghuang County, China , 2008 .

[39]  H. Guetzkow,et al.  War and revolution , 1966 .

[40]  M. Robinson,et al.  Cultural conflicts in tourism: inevitability and inequality. , 1999 .

[41]  R. Butler,et al.  Anuha Island resort, Solomon Islands: a case study of failure. , 1996 .

[42]  J. Solterer,et al.  The Economics of Justice , 1991 .

[43]  Richard A. Posner,et al.  The Economics of Justice. , 1983 .

[44]  Dennison Nash 2. Tourism as a Form of Imperialism , 1989 .

[45]  C. Urbanowicz Tourism In Tonga: Troubled Times , 1977 .

[46]  D. Greenwood Culture by the pound: an anthropological perspective on tourism as cultural commoditization. , 1989 .

[47]  S. Easterbrook,et al.  A Survey of Empirical Studies of Conflict , 1993 .

[48]  E. Cohen,et al.  Hunter-gatherer tourism in Thailand. , 1996 .

[49]  R. F. Murphy,et al.  Intergroup Hostility and Social Cohesion , 1957 .

[50]  V. Smith,et al.  Towards a theoretical analysis of tourism: economic dualism and cultural involution in Bali. , 1989 .

[51]  Dianne Dredge,et al.  Place change and tourism development conflict: Evaluating public interest , 2010 .

[52]  N. Kaldor The Philosophy of Economics: Welfare Propositions of Economics and Interpersonal Comparisons of Utility , 1939 .

[53]  R. Mack,et al.  The analysis of social conflict—toward an overview and synthesis , 1957 .

[54]  Albion W. Small General Sociology , 1912, American Journal of Sociology.