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Sustainable mountain area development through ecotourism | |
Author | Pradhan, Hari Kumar |
Call Number | AIT Diss. no.RD-00-3 |
Subject(s) | Ecotourism |
Note | A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, School of Environment, Resources and Development |
Publisher | Asian Institute of Technology |
Abstract | The conceptualization of an ecotourism framework for sustainable development is based on a study of seven tourism centers and their surrounding settlements. Selected as sources of information were 100 people involved in tourism (PIT), 101 people not involved in tourism (PNIT), futiher distinguishing among them between natives and immigrants, and 169 visitors. Tools employed include cross tabulation, index constrnction, statistical tests, multivariate analysis and GIS mapping. Farming was the economic mainstay of by far most PNIT. Visitors went trekking, either individually (IT) or in groups (GT). As for visitors, variations were significant by type (GT or IT), gender and age in terms of access to Nepal and onward to the trekking area; frequency of visits to Nepal; countries visited prior to arriving in Nepal; consumption of food, industrially produced beverages and bottled water; accommodation while trekking; dw·ation of stay in villages; littering; employment of labor force; and use of informal sector services. There was no significant variation, indeed, in visitors' budget allocations, with regard to their stay in Nepal. The incun-ing of expenditw·es, however, varied greatly in that IT spent their moneys along their trekking route, while GT availed of arrangements prepaid mostly in Kathmandu. As for the local actors, PIT and PNIT, variations were significant in spans of time doing agricultw·e and related activities, commercialization of agricultw·e, types of fuel used (dry vegetal residual matter, knee-timber, brushwood, timber), livestock rearing, and employment opp01iunities locally or outside. Research findings and analytical results collated in the SWOT analysis format identify as strengths the pristine mountain-area environment, the management performance by the Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP), the PIT entrepreneurship and the need, as recognized among the local population, for an alternative tourism promotion sh·ategy. Weaknesses are the subsistence nature of local agricultw·e, insufficient infrash·ucture, deficient commercialization and limited choice of local produce, dependency on impo1ted supplies, lack of know-how, skills and expertise required for the hospitality indush)' among the local population, narrowly limited scope for an informal sector, and underemployment I unemployment. Opportunities include the diversity of ethnic groups, cultw·es, crafts, flora and fauna in settlements beyond the beaten h·ack, and therein people's untapped indigenous knowledge and h·aditional hospitality, and the resow-ce potential for "downsh·eam" technology applications. Imminent threats are complex, including congestion caused by directing tow·ists to few spots, lack of tourism diversification leading to rninous competition by price-cutting to attract trekkers, compulsion for some PIT to operate without employees, and preference of successfully operating PIT for recruitment of outsiders to work at lodges or hotels. The single severest threat is that to the environment and its natw·al resources. Three Iisks are evident: [ 1] depletion of resources and degradation of the environment; [2] littering with garbage caused by tow-ism-at-large; and [3] putting the pristine environment, the paramount asset for sustainable mountain-area development, in jeopardy. Conclusions drawn on the basis of hypothesis test results address the dilemma faced by the host population under the impact of modernization caused by the tow-ism indush)', in both econoinic and environmental perspectives. Given the irreversible trend, the disparity between PIT and PNIT has been widening. Ecological precautions taken by the ACAP have become ecological consh·aints to the PNIT, whose livelihood has been threatened twofold. They have hardly been reaping any benefit from the local hospitality indush)'. Moreover, they have been severely restricted in their access to local natural resources, a vital component of their economic mainstay and their customm)' entitlement, for the sake of maintaining a pristine environment, the prime asset for tourism. There is sh·ong evidence that visitors might have become the complementa1)' asset, provided virtually all of them would have availed of provisions, facilities and services in such a manner that they had incwTed their expenditw·es inside the host area, with the effect of income generation by the local population. Recommendations are focused on getting the local people-at-large economically enabled to a degree where they will become capable to sustain development. Required is a wholesome change towm·d ecotow-ism and its integration into sustainable development. This makes the active participation of PNIT indispensable. They like other stakeholders including PIT and visitors must be motivated to adopt an attitude toward the environment of sharing the responsibility for and ensuring its protection and conservation and the prudent use of its resources. In this vein, recommendations outline policy measures, scopes of macro-level and micro-level planning, and supplemental)' research. Specifics of micro-level planning include the mobilizing of existing, synergetic agricultw·al potential; the creating of employment at a large scale; the promotion of tourism to attract ecologically oriented and development-minded visitors; the abatement of the hazard caused by littering; the revival of traditional arts and crafts; gender planning; and the h·aining of local manpower. Linkages, either to be sh·engthened or yet to be built, must underpin and advance the creation of a symbiotic relationship among agriculture-based host-area economy, local tow-ism indush)' and conservation of the environment. |
Year | 2000 |
Type | Dissertation |
School | School of Environment, Resources, and Development (SERD) |
Department | Department of Development and Sustainability (DDS) |
Academic Program/FoS | Rural Development, Gender and Resources (RD) |
Chairperson(s) | Weber, Karl E.; |
Examination Committee(s) | Murai, Shunji;Routray, Jayant Kumar;Shivakoti, Ganesh Prasad; |
Scholarship Donor(s) | Government of Japan |
Degree | Thesis (Ph.D.) - Asian Institute of Technology, 2000 |