Social Perception of Rural Tourism Impact: A Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Semi-Structured Interviews
2.2. Participatory Direct Observation in Focus Groups
- (a)
- Written transcript of all audio documents drawn up after each of the narratives containing all the fundamental aspects to understand them better [28].
- (b)
- Grouping by theme of the main ideas based on applying the affinity diagram methodology, also called the KJ method or Team Kawakita Jiro (TKJ), used by other researchers in Spain. The affinity diagram helps to group elements that are naturally related. It collects a large quantity of related verbal data by facilitating the identification of the most relevant and important situations under some key ideas. Each set of verbal opinions has been delimited as a category representing the most important ideas on tourism development in the Cinco Villas region. The ideas the interviewees most repeated were considered to delimit the categories and ten were defined. They provide information on the current and future existence of tourism in the municipality.
- (c)
- The respondents’ answers were classified into the previously listed categories. The name of the expert giving the response was not specified to safeguard anonymity. Instead interviewees were identified by a code. In this case interviewees included experts and professionals in the rural tourism sector in the area called Informants. Actor Involved in the Development of Rural Tourism [26,29,30,31,32] quoted in [28].
- (d)
- Several subcategories were established for each category to order and classify the most repeated ideas.
- (e)
- The subcategories were classified within each of the ten categories to identify the most repeated ideas in each category. Answers were added to each subcategory and ranked from highest to lowest in order of importance. The following order was considered for that purpose: each idea is only associated once with each participant even if it was repeated several times. A count was made of how many respondents’ ideas fell into each subcategory. Every opinion was associated at the end of the process with a subcategory. Relations between them were not established so as not to duplicate ideas detracting from the result of the analysis unless the answer encompasses several meanings.
- (f)
- The result was interpreted by dividing it into three stages. The first shows the result of each group of individual and group interviews, qualifying them by categories.
- TFR = 0, No possibility of receiving tourism.
- 1 < TFR < 10, minimum tourist function.
- 10 < TFR < 100, semi-specialised localities with artistic heritage.
- 100 < TFR < 1000, very specialized.
- TFR > 1000, polarised, functional hypertrophy.
3. Description of the Region
4. Tourism
5. Results
5.1. Discourses
5.1.1. Category: Tourist Spaces
‘The urban hills. All the Romanesque. There are monuments and Sos and Uncastillo represent the level of monuments that are the drivers of that tourism.’(Informant 16)
‘I don’t know. Sos and Uncastillo clearly develop tourism to a greater extent and the rest of us do not take off … our tourism is residual. We want to influence, that tourism is set in motion…’(Informant 12)
“Sierra de Santo Domingo is a protected area that we must promote; it is unknown and that’s an advantage, because even the inhabitants of the Cinco Villas region do not know it. That’s an important point that we must take advantage of … and, of course, we have the Romanesque and the Jewish quarters.’(Informant 5)
‘I think Sos del Rey Católico is the place that attracts more tourists, because I consider that a place is a tourist haunt when it has heritage and services. A place can be very attractive, like Uncastillo but it won’t be a tourist haunt until it has services that allow to develop tourism. Sos del Rey Católico, due to the circumstances, has the reputation, the heritage, services for tourists … Ejea must also be considered because it has its Romanesque heritage and enough services for tourists and Tauste, that I consider a tourist haunt because it has a very interesting heritage, such as the Mudejar Santa María church, services and is part of the historic Cinco Villas; Tauste has a mix of things that make it work for tourists. Its accommodation leaves room for improvement, Ejea’s are better.’(Informant 37)
5.1.2. Category: Tourism Management in the Cinco Villas Region
‘Being aware of each municipality’s characteristics would be important, since often, even when grants are distributed, they are distributed by town and by village and they are distributed the same way when, in actual fact, I believe there are other criteria. I believe that the tourist criterion should be considered by public administrations. I think administrations at both a regional and provincial level should take this into account, … Article 59 of the local administration law of Aragon talks about the municipal monuments. I explained to the autonomous community minister that in monumental municipalities, logically they have to support the monuments and attractions. So, I believe this article should be developed, Sos del Rey Católico and Uncastillo meet the conditions—and autonomous government could support us or even bring out a new condition for example, tourist municipality, “Come, get some support, as a tourist municipality.” I believe this would probably be a good idea and it could help us. … For example, I am now going to fight for the summer film campus to see if I can bring a famous filmmaker here. I have to start asking as it would be very good for us if an administration said, “Come on, let’s do this in Sos.” Every action the town manages to pack in might help in that month to maintain the earnings of the local economy, which can often suffer. Consequently, this tourist municipality criterion does not just say they’re helping you but also understands the base economy in these municipalities. Applying the tourist municipality criterion, a little bit more would probably help us. Because every town is different. The image you get from one is not the same. That image is the image you have of the province of Zaragoza or Aragon.’(Informant 26)
5.1.3. Category: The Role of Municipalities and the Synergies among Them
‘We tried to participate in one project but it failed. It was a tourist project promoted by the mayors of the villages but they started it in the recession. The idea was to sign an agreement to make different routes that would start in different places depending on the municipalities of the route. The participants of the project were: Undués de Lerda with the “Camino de Santiago” (the Way of Saint James); Sos with its heritage; Urriés with its museums in old houses; and Isuerre with the mushroom museum. It was nearly finished but money ran out and some municipalities went over budget and finally we were alone in the project with Sos.’(Informant 29)
‘Association among the municipalities is essential for two reasons. Firstly, because it represents a model in which although Los Bañales is legally in the municipality of Uncastillo, the surrounding towns have understood—partly due to the historic thoroughfare, because Los Bañales was a Roman city whose surrounding rural territory extended into the current municipalities of Biota, Uncastillo, Sádaba and Layana—these councils have understood that the impact of tourism in Los Bañales will leave its mark on Uncastillo but it will also leave its mark on the surrounding municipalities and will attract development possibilities. That is the first success, managing to get something that belongs to just one council to become everyone’s project. Secondly, I think it also establishes a management model, which, for institutional pressure purposes, is more effective, because, logically, when asking for a grant or European funds, it’s better for four councils to ask together than just one, especially when we're not talking about an Ejea de los Caballeros, or a Calatayud but instead medium-sized or small municipalities. I think this institutional involvement has proved essential and I believe it is one of the major achievements of Los Bañales, besides social involvement. I think the people in the villages, independently of the council, the people in the villages have reconnected with Los Bañales and consider it theirs, people from Biota, from Sádaba and of course from Uncastillo.’(Special Informant)
5.1.4. The Role of the Region as Public Administration
‘… recently the region has promoted signage for the Jewish quarters but often … actions … you have to invest a lot of money without knowing very well how or why and I think that, instead of some types of actions, more detailed studies should be done, because some quarters already have signs while others do not. Sometimes we receive specific budget for some actions without a previous detailed study with the guidelines of what to do and why. Other times they spend money without a specific purpose and it would be more effective if it were spent knowing why it is done.’(Informant 16)
5.1.5. Rural Residents’ Attitudes
‘I think that people should know more about the heritage of the region, especially local people and owners of the rural tourism houses. I would hold a conference to raise awareness of the area’s heritage for the local people and for the tourism entrepreneurs in the region … for everyone, the catering industry in general, accommodation, restaurants, etc. How they should talk about and recommend local sites of interest such as Luesia, the golf course, churches, the interpretation centre of religious art, if they have not been there or if they do not even know about it existence? If we talk with business owners about the Aguarales and they have not been there and do not know it, how can they be in command of the people? …’(Informant 41)
5.2. Tourist Function Rate (TFR), Buhalis’s 6As and Number of BICs
- tourist independence, which means the village capacity of attracting visitors without the influence of other municipalities;
- political involvement, refers to the politician’s commitment in relation to tourism and to the endogenous development of the region;
- business initiative in rural tourism, means the private role in the economy of the region due to the touristic offer such as rural houses, sports and active tourism, …
- involvement of residents, is the perceived level of acceptance that people in the region have in relation to visitors and their level of empathy with foreigners.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Archaeology | Municipality |
Yacimiento El corral de Calvo | Luesia |
Valdetaus | Tauste |
“Los Bañales” | Uncastillo |
Pueyo de “Los Bañales” | Uncastillo |
Intangible Cultural Heritage | |
Dance de Tauste | Tauste |
Cultural Heritage | |
Castillo de Ballesta | Ardisa |
Crucero del Crucifijo | Ardisa |
Iglesia P.Sta Maria del Rosario | Asín |
Cruz de Cruceta | Asín |
Cruz de la Virgen del Campo | Asín |
Iglesia de los Santos Julián y Basilisa | Bagüés |
Torre del Castillo | Biel |
Crucero del Burgo | Biel |
Crucero del Castillo | Biel |
Peirón de San Martín | Biel |
Castillo—Torreón del Conde Aranda | Biota |
Iglesia de San Miguel | Biota |
Palacio de los Condes de Aranda | Biota |
Castillo de Malpica de Arba | Biota |
Castillo de Sora | Castejón de Valdejasa |
Torre y Portada Iglesia de Sta. Mª La Mayor | Castejón de Valdejasa |
Crucero de la Cruz Alta | Castiliscar |
Cruz Baja | Castiliscar |
Castillo de Castiliscar | Castiliscar |
Conjunto Histórico de Ejea de los Caballeros | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Iglesia Fortificada del Salvador | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Iglesia Fortificada de Santa María | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Muralla de Ejea de los Caballeros | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Castillo de La Corona | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Crucero | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Cruz de San Pedro | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Cruz o Pilón del Serrallón | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Peirón de San Isidro | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Viacrucis y Calvario | Ejea de los Caballeros |
Torre de Señorío | Erla |
Castillo—Palacio de Paúles | Erla |
Castillo de Santias | Erla |
Castillo de Los Lunas | Erla |
Cruz | Erla |
Cruz de Santa Ana | Erla |
Iglesia Parroquial de San Nicolás de Bari | Frago, El |
Ermita de San Miguel | Frago, El |
Humilladero de Cristo | Frago, El |
Viacrucis y Calvario | Frago, El |
Cruz | Isuerre |
Torre de Layana | Layana |
Cruz | Layana |
La Cruz del Puente | Longás |
Iglesia del Salvador | Luesia |
Castillo de Luesia | Luesia |
Conjunto Histórico Villa de Luesia | Luesia |
Crucero de San Severo | Luesia |
Ermita de San Gil de Mediavilla | Luna |
Castillo de la Corona o Torre del reloj | Luna-Lacorvilla |
Castillo de Lacorvilla o Yéquera | Luna |
Castillo de Obano | Luna |
Castillo de Villaverde | Luna |
Iglesia de Santiago | Luna |
Muralla de Luna | Luna |
Crucero de Abarrós | Luna |
Crucero de Mingalé | Luna |
Crucero de Monlora | Luna |
Crucero de Mosén Pablo | Luna |
Crucero de Paúles | Luna |
Crucero de Valdecabañas | Luna |
Crucero de la Cruz Baja | Luna |
Crucero o rollo de Santía | Luna |
Cruz de Monreal | Luna |
Cruz de Paúles | Luna |
Cruz de Marracos | Marracos |
Torre—Castillo de Navardún | Navardún |
Crucero de Morea | Navardún |
Cruz de Goyo | Orés |
Cruz de la Atalaya | Orés |
Cruz de las Eras | Orés |
Cruz de Gurrea | Pedrosas, Las |
Cruz del Cementerio | Pedrosas, Las |
Cruz de la Plaza | Piedratajada |
Peirón | Piedratajada |
Iglesia de Ntra. Sra. de la Purificación | Pintanos, Los |
Crucero | Pintanos, Los |
Crucero de Ruesta | Pintanos, Los |
Crucero o Rollo | Pintanos, Los |
Cruz de San Juan | Pintanos, Los |
Estela del puente | Pintanos, Los |
Castillo de Sádaba o de Los Bañales | Sádaba |
Mausoleo de la Sinagoga | Sádaba |
Mausoleo de los Atilios | Sádaba |
Iglesia de Santa María | Sádaba |
Torre de la Iglesia de Santa María | Sádaba |
Casa Parroquial | Sádaba |
Monasterio Concepción Virgen | Sádaba |
Cruz del alto | Sádaba |
Cruz del Cementerio | Sierra de Luna |
Casa Palacio de los Sada | Sos del Rey Católico |
Villa de Sos del Rey Católico | Sos del Rey Católico |
Iglesia parroquial de San Esteban | Sos del Rey Católico |
Murallas | Sos del Rey Católico |
Castillo de Peña Felizana | Sos del Rey Católico |
Casa de la Torre | Sos del Rey Católico |
Castillo de Añues | Sos del Rey Católico |
Castillo de Roita | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de Ruesta | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de San Juan | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de Valentuñana | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de la Puerta de Zaragoza | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de la Puerta de la Reina | Sos del Rey Católico |
Crucero de los Tres Caminos | Sos del Rey Católico |
Cruz de Valentuñana | Sos del Rey Católico |
Iglesia de Santa María | Tauste |
Castillo de Tauste | Tauste |
Iglesia de San Antonio Abad | Tauste |
Monasterio de San Jorge | Tauste |
Viacrucis | Tauste |
Villa de Uncastillo | Uncastillo |
Casa Consistorial | Uncastillo |
Torre de la Iglesia de Santa María La Mayor | Uncastillo |
Iglesia de San Andrés | Uncastillo |
Iglesia de San Miguel | Uncastillo |
Castillo de Peña Ayllón | Uncastillo |
Castillo de Sibirana | Uncastillo |
Torre de la iglesia de San Martín | Uncastillo |
Castillo de Peñamira | Uncastillo |
Cruz de Santa Cruz | Uncastillo |
Cruz del Peñazo | Uncastillo |
Viacrucis | Uncastillo |
Iglesia Parroquial de San Martín | Undués de Lerda |
Castillo de Ruesta | Urriés - Ruesta |
Ermita de San Juan de Ruesta | Urriés |
Ermita de Santiago de Ruesta | Urriés |
Torre de Urriés | Urriés |
Iglesia de San Esteban | Urriés |
Torre de Valpalmas | Valpalmas |
Movable Cultural Assets | |
Hebrew inscription | Frago, El |
Hebrew inscription | Uncastillo |
Relieve prerrománico | Luesia |
Palaeontology | |
Ichnite (fossil footprints) sites | Sierra de Luna |
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Year | Population | Population Density (per km2) | Year | Population | Population Density (per km2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1900 | 36,105 | 11.8 | 1960 | 40,779 | 13.3 |
1910 | 38,487 | 12.6 | 1970 | 37,640 | 12.3 |
1920 | 43,611 | 14.2 | 1981 | 34,757 | 11.3 |
1930 | 45,889 | 15.0 | 1991 | 32,656 | 10.7 |
1940 | 45,677 | 14.9 | 2001 | 32,209 | 10.5 |
1950 | 42,682 | 13.9 | 2011 | 33.150 | 10.6 |
1 January to 21 December 2015 | 1 January to 31 December 2016 | Increase-Decrease | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total number of visitors | 59,365 | 67,964 | 14.48% | ||
Number of visitors that have stayed in the region | 55,362 | 93.26% | 63,651 | 93.65% | 14.97% |
1 day | 41,116 | 69.26% | 50,216 | 73.89% | 22.13% |
2–3 days | 11,665 | 19.65% | 11,161 | 16.42% | −4.32% |
4–7 days | 2077 | 3.50% | 1815 | 2.67% | −12.61% |
Resident | 305 | 0.51% | 393 | 0.58% | 28.85% |
>week | 199 | 0.34% | 66 | 0.10% | −66.83% |
no value | 4003 | 6.74% | 4313 | 6.35% | 7.74% |
Municipalities | TFR | 6AS | No. of BIC |
---|---|---|---|
Ardisa | 10.81 | 4.08 | 2 |
Asín | 18.27 | 4.25 | 3 |
Bagüés | 184.62 | 4.45 | 1 |
Biel | 33.78 | 5.63 | 4 |
Biota | 4.49 | 3.54 | 4 |
Castejón de Valdejasa | 5.26 | 3.45 | 2 |
Castiliscar | 2.14 | 3.25 | 3 |
Ejea de los Caballeros | 4.58 | 6.79 | 10 |
El Frago | 2.16 | 5.54 | 5 |
Erla | 19.23 | 2.96 | 6 |
Isuerre | 28.57 | 4.83 | 1 |
Layana | 0.01 | 3.42 | 2 |
Lobera de Onsella | 21.43 | 5.17 | 0 |
Longás | 38.89 | 5.17 | 1 |
Luesia | 34.43 | 6 | 6 |
Luna | 6.88 | 4.42 | 17 |
Marracos | 0.01 | 2.83 | 1 |
Navardún | 102.44 | 4.38 | 2 |
Orés | 23.21 | 4.67 | 3 |
Pedrosas | 0.01 | 2.92 | 2 |
Piedratajada | 0.01 | 2.21 | 2 |
Pintano | 95.65 | 6.08 | 3 |
Puendeluna | 85.71 | 2.5 | 0 |
Sadaba | 0.01 | 4.16 | 8 |
Sierra de Luna | 2.49 | 2.79 | 2 |
Sos del Rey Católico | 4.49 | 8.33 | 15 |
Tauste | 68.08 | 5.91 | 7 |
Uncastillo | 0.76 | 6.67 | 15 |
Undués de Lerda | 22.08 | 5.58 | 1 |
Undués Pintano | 104.92 | 5.75 | 3 |
Urriés | 202.7 | 4.79 | 5 |
Valpalmas | 0.01 | 4.33 | 1 |
Cinco Villas (5,5) | Puntuaction | |
---|---|---|
1. Attractions | ||
● Resources | Cultural heritage | 8 |
Natural | 8 | |
2. Accessibility | ||
● Access | Main road accessibility | 6 |
Attractiveness of acces | 6 | |
● Environment | Attractiveness of the environment | 6 |
Maintenance of the environment | 5 | |
● Urban area | Attractiveness of the urban area | 6 |
Maintenance of the urban centre | 6 | |
● Tourist signage | Indicating content | 5 |
Indicating location | 4 | |
Explaining content | 4 | |
Explaining material | 4 | |
3. Amenities | ||
● Restoration | 6 | |
● Accomodation | 6 | |
● Tourist information | Accessibility | 4 |
Quality of tourist information | 6 | |
Material and human resources | 7 | |
4. Available packages | 4 | |
5. Activities | 4 | |
6. Ancillary services | 6 | |
Other aspects: | ||
Involvement of resident | 5 | |
Business initiative in rural tourism | 6 | |
Political involvement | 5 | |
Tourist independence | 5 |
PROS | CONS | |
---|---|---|
Socioeconomic | - Diversification of rural economy, promoting the service sector. - Demand for new services for the community and new infrastructures. - Promotion of innovative activities. - Help to develop local and craft products. - Creation of new employment. - Additional income for local families. - New opportunities for young people and women. - Reduction of rural exodus. - Contribution to return migration movement. - Contribution to local endogenous development. | - Jobs created are normally part-time jobs and conditions are not good enough. - Women’s role of taking care of tourists continues. - Creates inflation and a rise in housing prices. - Seasonal activity that needs other income. -Benefits created cannot be spread equally in the community. |
Cultural | - Local culture recovery and revitalization. - Boosts the community’s sense of identity. - Boosts collective activities. - Helps to identify places. - Provides intercultural exchanges between locals and newcomers. | - Risk of manufacturing the local culture. - Can modify social balance in the community. - Can generate upper class and reject new incoming members. - Can create a sense of identity usurpation and local community marginalisation. |
Environmental | - Revitalization factor of natural resources. - Contribution to heritage and environmental awareness. - Encourages natural protected areas. - Boosts environmental sensibility of the local community. - Preserves agriculture and landscape. - Uses ancient characteristic interpretations buildings and reduces massive construction areas. | - Tourist activity and tourists create environmental impacts. - Tourism creates pollution, waste and noise and light pollution. - Tourism consumes environmental resources and modifies local flora and fauna. |
© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Sanagustin-Fons, V.; Lafita-Cortés, T.; Moseñe, J.A. Social Perception of Rural Tourism Impact: A Case Study. Sustainability 2018, 10, 339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020339
Sanagustin-Fons V, Lafita-Cortés T, Moseñe JA. Social Perception of Rural Tourism Impact: A Case Study. Sustainability. 2018; 10(2):339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020339
Chicago/Turabian StyleSanagustin-Fons, Victoria, Teresa Lafita-Cortés, and José A. Moseñe. 2018. "Social Perception of Rural Tourism Impact: A Case Study" Sustainability 10, no. 2: 339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020339
APA StyleSanagustin-Fons, V., Lafita-Cortés, T., & Moseñe, J. A. (2018). Social Perception of Rural Tourism Impact: A Case Study. Sustainability, 10(2), 339. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10020339