1. Introduction
Tourism has made a significant contribution to the economy of many communities around the world due to its ability to generate income and employment [
1]. However, despite being a source of great economic benefits, its unplanned growth has also contributed significantly to environmental degradation and negative social-cultural impacts [
2]. These undesirable side effects have led to growing concerns about the conservation and preservation of natural resources, human well-being, and long-term economic viability [
3], seeking new forms of tourism planning, management, and development. As an alternative to the traditional tourist model, where the interrelation with the local population is practically non-existent, in recent years we have been witnessing a change in tourists’ behaviour, eager for new experiences that allow sustainable development and a more direct contact with the local actors of the destination, where the local culture of the area, its customs, its gastronomy, and its own history are becoming increasingly more important.
Community tourism is an endogenous alternative to outsourced tourism strategies in poorly developed regions, enabling the creation of specific destinations that allow local communities to generate wealth with a new complementary activity, never a substitution, of the traditional dominant one. It is, therefore, a form of sustainable tourism based on the community that aims to satisfy the needs of both residents and current tourists without compromising the needs of future generations, who live or visit the tourist destination. Thus, community tourism with a sustainable nature must aim at improving the living standards of residents while optimizing local economic benefits, minimizing the adverse effects of tourism, protecting the natural and built environment and providing a quality experience to visitors [
4].
Therefore, it is essential to promote the participation of the community in the tourism planning process where decision-making involves all stakeholders and where the benefits have an impact on the community itself. The aim is to preserve the ethnic identity, values and cultural heritage of indigenous communities, while helping them to adapt to change and open their mentality, making them an essential part of the tourism product [
5].
In the last three decades, there has been an increase in literature on sustainable and community tourism. While the sustainable tourism discourse focuses on long-term sustainability, the literature on community-based tourism looks at responsibilities and practices at the local level of development and management. Due to the interest aroused within the academic world, the fundamental objective of this work is to perform an analysis of the published literature of a scientific nature related to Community Tourism through a bibliometric-comparative study of the articles indexed in WoS and Scopus, which enables to determine which of the two bases has a greater coverage, as well as the overlap between the two. In addition, and as secondary objectives, by means of statistical methods, bibliometric indicators, and analysis of citations, the aim is to know how much, who, what, where, and how Community Tourism has been investigated, providing useful information for academics and professionals by providing a series of significant indicators to measure the bibliographic material allowing for the determination trends and identification of research areas.
Bibliographic databases play a key role in bibliometric research, since they enable analysis of the scientific activity carried out by researchers, centers, regions and countries in order to detect their strengths and weaknesses and to identify trends in research. The validity of the work will depend on its adequate selection since it must cover the area under study sufficiently [
6]. In order to locate documents focused on Community Tourism, and indexed both in WoS and in Scopus, an advanced search for terms with a time limit set in 2017 was carried out within both bases. As a result, a set of 115 articles in WoS and 185 in Scopus were selected, which constitute the empirical ad hoc basis of the study, later processed through the bibliographic manager Refworks.
This article is structured into four main sections. First, and after this introduction, we proceed to review the academic literature in order to establish the theoretical framework. Next, in
Section 3, both the methodology of the calculations and the tracking strategy used for the selection of the references are described. In point 4, the main results obtained from the study of the basic bibliometric indicators, as well as from the overlap and singularity analysis between the bases are detailed. Finally, in
Section 5, the final conclusions reached, and the limitations associated with the research, are presented.
2. Theoretical Framework
As a concept, Community Tourism or Community-Based Tourism (CBT) appears for the first time in academic literature in the book Tourism: A community approach by Murphy [
7], where aspects related to tourism in the rural areas of the most disadvantaged countries are analyzed, a subject that the same author addresses in later studies [
8,
9]. This concept is closely related to other ideas regarding tourism and the host community, such as the following: tourism against poverty (Pro-Poor Tourism -PPT-), which analyzes the role of tourism in fighting poverty in certain areas [
10]; Community Benefit Tourism Initiatives (CBTIs), where there is the need to search for economic benefits for the community based on the fact that the community has the ownership, management and control of the tourism projects to be developed [
11]; or the concept of promotion through international cooperation of community tourism (donor-assisted, community-based tourism -DACBT-), promoted by International Cooperation agencies and that allows local communities characterized by subsistence economies to obtain money to undertake with their own microenterprises [
12].
There are many definitions of the term CBT: for France [
13], it is a type of tourism managed by and for the local community; Mathieson & Wall [
14] highlight both the economic and social benefits that community-based tourism provides locally; Shaw & William [
15] establish that tourism planning should be implemented with community involvement and consensus, promoting community actions above all individual actions. Pearce [
16] suggests that CBT gives the local entity decision-making control based on consensus and an equitable flow of benefits for all stakeholders, while Haywood believes that “
prosperous and healthy communities are the cornerstone for a successful tourism industry” [
17] (p. 105).
Cañada [
18] understands Community Tourism as a management model of tourism activity in which the local population of a certain disadvantaged territory, and through different organizational structures of a collective nature, exerts a predominant role in the control of its design, implementation, management, and distribution of benefits. For López-Gúzman & Sánchez Cañizares [
5] (p. 89), it is an activity that “
is based on the creation of tourism products under the basic principle of the necessary involvement of the local community”. In this sense, for Casas-Jurados et al., [
19] (p. 93), Community Tourism refers to tourism that “
is based on the local community”
and “
that aims to reduce a negative impact and reinforce a positive impact”. In any case, tourism development must consider and respect local needs and their ways of life to avoid conflict related to the local culture [
15].
As can be seen from the previous definitions established, the literature related to CBT focuses its analysis on the relationship between the tourism industry and the host community, highlighting the participation of the host population as one of the pillars on which planning, maintenance and development of the tourism sector in order to promote its sustainability are supported [
20].
However, within the vast literature on CBT, while the participation of the resident community is a relatively ubiquitous principle, community ownership and resident control over decision-making face significant challenges. In a critical summary of several “community-driven” development projects around the world, Mansuri & Rao provide valuable information on the political (and cultural) problem by carefully distinguishing community-driven development from community-based development. “
Community development is a general term for projects that actively include the recipients in their design and management, and community-driven development refers to community-based development projects in which communities have direct control over key decisions, including the management of investment funds.” [
21] (p. 1–2).
Another noteworthy characteristic, in view of the definitions given, is the close relationship between CBT and sustainable tourism. Therefore, CBT is conceived as “
a type of sustainable tourism that promotes strategies in favor of the poor in a community environment. CBT initiatives aim to involve local residents in the operation and management of small tourism projects as a means to alleviate poverty and provide an alternative source of income for community members” [
22] (p. 10).
Community Tourism should be considered as a complement, not a substitute, in the revitalizing policies of the local economy, as an instrument that helps mitigate, or at least alleviate, the adverse effects of underdevelopment [
23]. For this reason, many studies analyze the implementation of community tourism in the most impoverished areas [
24]; Kenya [
25,
26], Botswana [
27], Namibia [
28], China [
29], Malaysia [
30], Thailand [
31], Australia [
32], Canada [
33], Mexico [
34], Chile [
35], Brazil [
36], Peru [
37], Costa Rica [
38], El Salvador [
5], Ecuador [
39].
In addition to approaching the issue from a regional perspective, researchers approach their work on CBT considering different points of view. Thus, in some cases it is observed from a more conceptual angle, differentiating the type of tourism that is involved: cultural, ecological, gastronomic, arts and crafts tourism, etc. [
40]. In others, it reveals different socio-political aspects of great importance: involvement of the community in decision-making, social integration of marginalized groups or women, economic development, etc. [
41]. Other times it is investigated from the point of view of institutional support [
42]. In any case, and despite being aspects that are undertaken in a particular way, researchers agree that all these aspects have an important relationship with each other.
Vajirakachorn [
43], in his study on the rural communities of Thailand, identified 10 key criteria for successful CBT: local participation, distribution of benefits, preservation of tourism resources, association and support from inside and outside the community, local ownership, local management and leadership, communication and interaction between stakeholders, quality of life, the scale of tourism development and tourist satisfaction. Based on a broader study that included a wide range of cases of rural tourism, community tourism and ecotourism practices in several countries of the Asia-Pacific region, Hatton [
44] concluded that while the implementation and results of Community Tourism vary, there are common issues: economic benefit, leadership, empowerment, and employment. But the economic benefits are not the only ones obtained from the practice of CBT: Socioeconomic improvements in general, and sustainable diversification of lifestyles are some of its consequences [
45,
46].
To achieve these objectives, the different public administrations, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), private institutions and the local community itself must get involved and work together. According to Nyaupane et al. [
29], one of the main limitations that local communities have to face when implementing tourism projects is, together with the lack of financial resources, infrastructure or knowledge, precisely the potential conflicts between different public administrations. Thus, CBT becomes an effective way to coordinate and implement different policies to avoid conflicts between different tourism actors and obtain synergies based on the exchange of knowledge, analysis and capacity between all community members [
25].
On the other hand, one of the most controversial aspects in research work is determining the amount and type of tourists suitable for each community in order to avoid the adverse effects of tourism, such as loss of cultural identity or degradation of natural resources [
47]. In this regard, Nyaupane et al. [
29] emphasize that receiving a small number of tourists facilitates greater contact with the local culture and society, avoiding the risk of tourists invading private aspects of the local culture, but with the disadvantage, at the same time, of reducing economic resources generated by tourism. Residents in a great variety of communities seem to be positively predisposed towards tourism. This does not imply that they do not have concerns about its impact on their communities, but specific concerns vary from place to place. There are certainly exceptions to residents’ general positive attitudes, as shown by the study of Johnson et al. [
48]. However, in general, tourism is a well-accepted and well-thought-out industry [
49].
5. Conclusions
The analysis of scientific publications through bibliometric reviews represents a key element in the research process, not only as an instrument capable of analysing existing information in order to show trends, but also as a measure of its impact on the environment. In this way, it was possible to establish the development presented by this topic and the approaches followed. In this process, bibliographic databases play a key role in allowing access to most of the information. Due to the existence of differences in coverage, information provided and downloading of documents, the selection of the most appropriate database in a bibliometric study is an essential phase. Based on the results, and as a conclusion, this section provides a series of ideas on research related to the area of Community Tourism (its volume, evolution, visibility and structure) that may be useful for future studies. At the same time, it compares the coverage and overlap that two of the main databases in the market, WoS and Scopus, perform in this particular field.
The first publication of a scientific article related to Community Tourism took place at the beginning of the eighties of the last century. After a first period of uncertainty in which there were a few publications, in 2010 we entered a second phase of exponential growth, where the discipline becomes the object of study concentrating the bulk of publications and which is extended, at least, until our days. In this period, just as happened with the number of articles published, the growth in the number of citations that publications received is constant, reaching its highest level also in 2017. During the entire period, the two databases analyzed, WoS and Scopus, show a strong correlation both in the number of articles published annually and in the number of citations received. However, Scopus is the base that as a whole, collects a greater number of articles and receives a greater number of citations.
Despite the existence of this and other similarities, there are also differences in the coverage that both databases make of the Community Tourism area. With more than half of single articles, Scopus is seen as the base that best covers overlapping, at the same time, almost 80% of WoS articles. 20% in the degree of singularity of WoS gives us the measure of the amount of information that would be lost if Scopus were chosen as the only bibliographic base.
Based on the total number of articles located in WoS and Scopus, and following the criteria proposed by Lotka [
85] for the classification of authors based on their productivity, only Giampiccoli, A. is within the large producer category and more than 90% in the case of small producers with a single authorship, causing the average productivity index per author to be very close to 1. Although there is a wide variety of countries of affiliation of the authors, which shows how geographically widespread this field is, the United States stands out at the forefront of research on Community Tourism, since almost 17% of the authors belong to one of its centers, preferably university. Precisely, in relation to scientific production authorship (collaboration index), the majority of articles are signed by multiple authors. Within these, articles by two authors represent the highest percentage with 43%, which places the collaboration index, expressed as the average number of authors per article, at 1.85.
Finally, and in relation to the journals where the articles are published, the core of the main journals that collect articles on Community Tourism (Bradford core) consists of only 3 publications, standing out, both by the number of articles and by the number of citations received, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, within the first quartile in the subarea of Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism. Regarding the thematic classification of documents made by the databases according to the areas to which the journals where they are published belong, there is a main field of research, common for WoS and Scopus, in which articles on Community Tourism are included: Social Sciences, but given the multidisciplinary nature of Tourism, we must emphasise other areas such as Business, Management and Accounting, Sociology or Environmental Science.
These results must be contextualized within the area of Community Tourism, taking into account the limitation of defining a specific search profile and the selection of databases. On the other hand, our intention at no time has been to evaluate the quality of the selected articles—an objective that could be raised in a subsequent investigation—but rather their descriptive-quantitative analysis. In order to broaden the research, it would be interesting to extend the comparative study to other databases (EBSCOHost, Science Direct, and Google Scholar) and carry out a collaboration analysis such as those carried out in other areas of knowledge.