TY - JOUR
T1 - EXPLORING THE PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING OF TOURISM COMMUNITY MEMBERS THROUGH THE LENS OF SELF-DETERMINATION THEORY: A CASE STUDY OF QUEENSTOWN, NEW ZEALAND
AU - Kondja, Alice
AU - Filep, Sebastian
AU - Mackenzie, Susan Houge
AU - Lo, Ada
AU - Vada, Sera
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Cognizant, LLC.
PY - 2024/3/5
Y1 - 2024/3/5
N2 - Despite a substantial history of research on the well-being of host communities at tourism destinations, the individual psychological well-being of local residents remains an underexplored topic. This study explores the psychological well-being of tourism host community members through a case study of Queenstown, New Zealand. By drawing on the self-determination theory, an innovative focus group analysis approach, microinterlocutor analysis, complemented by thematic analysis, was used to explain the psychological well-being of individual host community members in a nature-based tourism destination. Findings revealed a sense of autonomy, relatedness to people and the natural environment, feelings of competence or mastery, and beneficence-supported psychological well-being. This study extends prior research on the well-being of host communities by identifying key psychological well-being domains explicitly related to host community members. Practical implications of the findings are highlighted with reference to nature-based destinations.
AB - Despite a substantial history of research on the well-being of host communities at tourism destinations, the individual psychological well-being of local residents remains an underexplored topic. This study explores the psychological well-being of tourism host community members through a case study of Queenstown, New Zealand. By drawing on the self-determination theory, an innovative focus group analysis approach, microinterlocutor analysis, complemented by thematic analysis, was used to explain the psychological well-being of individual host community members in a nature-based tourism destination. Findings revealed a sense of autonomy, relatedness to people and the natural environment, feelings of competence or mastery, and beneficence-supported psychological well-being. This study extends prior research on the well-being of host communities by identifying key psychological well-being domains explicitly related to host community members. Practical implications of the findings are highlighted with reference to nature-based destinations.
KW - Host community
KW - Nature-based tourism
KW - Psychological well-being
KW - Self-determination theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85188186931&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3727/108354223X16898473535094
DO - 10.3727/108354223X16898473535094
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85188186931
SN - 1083-5423
VL - 29
SP - 1
EP - 16
JO - Tourism Analysis
JF - Tourism Analysis
IS - 1
ER -