Tourism Perspectives in National Parks—A Hungarian Case Study from the Aspects of Rural Development
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample Areas
2.2. Methods
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- What historical factors have shaped the opportunities and positions of nature conservation and tourism in the examined national parks, particularly nature-based tourism?
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- What are the barriers to cooperation between nature conservation and tourism?
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- How would you describe the changes in conservation and tourism since the pandemic began?
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- How can the visitor numbers in national parks be increased and optimized sustainably? What are the prospects for nature-based tourism in protected areas?
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- What role can national parks as institutions play in tourism and rural development?
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- Is it possible to develop a tourism product package linked to national parks to help the rural areas’ economies?
- Tourism data published by the Hungarian Central Statistical Office (HCSO);
- Visitor statistics published in the annual reports of the three national parks;
- Local tourism tax data from the Hungarian State Treasury downloaded through the National Regional Development and Planning Information System (www.teir.hu, accessed on 11 August 2021);
- Data collected by web scraping from the sites of the nature conservation sector (magyarnemzetiparkok.hu, accessed on 6 August 2021; termeszetvedelem.hu, accessed on 5 August 2021) and tourism organizations (falusiturizmus.eu, accessed on 11 August 2021).
3. Results
3.1. Results of Interviews
3.1.1. Historical Factors
3.1.2. Barriers of the Partnership
3.1.3. Changes with COVID-19
3.1.4. Potential of NBT
3.2. Tourism Data and Indicators of the Study Area
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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HNP | KNP | KMNP | Total | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Sites | Area (ha) | Number of Sites | Area (ha) | Number of Sites | Area (ha) | Number of Sites | Area (ha) | |
National park (IUCN II) | 1 | 80,367 | 9 | 50,522 | 1 | 51,247 | 11 | 182,136 |
National monuments (IUCN III) | 0 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 4 |
Minor nature reserves (IUCN IV) | 20 | 6068 | 19 (20) * | 5006 | 4 | 164 | 43 | 11,238 |
Landscape protection areas (IUCN V) | 4 | 55,532 | 3 | 26,833 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 82,365 |
Total | 25 | 141,967 | 34 | 82,365 | 5 | 51,411 | 64 | 275,743 |
Number of settlements | 310 |
of which city | 75 |
of which village | 235 |
Number of rural settlements | 280 |
Area of the study area (sqkm) | 22,469 |
Total population in 2019 (head) | 1,669,712 |
Population of cities in 2019 (head) | 1,307,326 |
Population of villages in 2019 (head) | 362,386 |
Population of rural settlements in 2019 (head) | 625,955 |
Population density of the study area in 2019 (head/sqkm) | 74.31 |
Number of settlements with social, economic, and infrastructural problems * | 143 |
Population in this category (head) | 187,949 |
Number of settlements with high unemployment rate * | 103 |
Population in this category (head) | 244,801 |
Number of settlements with social, economic, and infrastructural problems and high unemployment rate * | 80 |
Population in this category (head) | 113,877 |
Total number of beneficiary settlements | 166 |
Population of the beneficiary settlements (head) | 318,873 |
Year | Number of Guests | Number of Guest Nights | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
KNP | HNP | KMNP | KNP | HNP | KMNP | |
2011 | 146,118 | 103,244 | 16,276 | 3861 | n/d | 2460 |
2012 | 137,158 | 180,558 | 30,138 | 3339 | 1623 | 2071 |
2013 | 115,384 | 191,659 | 31,081 | 3494 | 2351 | 2418 |
2014 | 96,436 | 138,108 | 38,731 | 4080 | 1731 | 2639 |
2015 | 96,271 | 160,483 | 42,168 | 4033 | 3023 | 2345 |
2016 | 101,620 | 178,063 | 49,437 | 4250 | 2681 | 2617 |
2017 | 104,195 | 156,762 | 64,442 | 3257 | 3090 | 2427 |
2018 | 113,468 | 159,065 | 80,524 | 3458 | 3494 | 3315 |
2019 | 108,753 | 160,499 | 96,801 | 3894 | 2906 | 3374 |
2020 | 19,256 | 74,774 | 60,369 | 2187 | 1232 | 2057 |
HNP | KNP | KMNP | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of reception, visitor, and information centers | 2 | 3 | 3 | 8 |
Number of countryside houses | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Number of museums and exhibition places and other visitor facilities | 17 | 6 | 1 | 24 |
Number of forest schools | 1 | 2 | 3 | 6 |
Accommodation in forest schools (head) | 36 | 74 | 84 | 194 |
Number of nature trails | 11 | 25 (26) * | 7 | 43 |
Guest Nights in 2019 | Guest Nights in 2020 | 2020/2019 (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Top 3 | 2,482,212 | 1,302,832 | 52.49 |
Top 10 | 3,472,992 | 1,934,582 | 55.70 |
Top 25 | 4,116,524 | 2,423,145 | 58.86 |
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Kovács, A.D.; Gulyás, P.; Farkas, J.Z. Tourism Perspectives in National Parks—A Hungarian Case Study from the Aspects of Rural Development. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12002. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112002
Kovács AD, Gulyás P, Farkas JZ. Tourism Perspectives in National Parks—A Hungarian Case Study from the Aspects of Rural Development. Sustainability. 2021; 13(21):12002. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112002
Chicago/Turabian StyleKovács, András Donát, Péter Gulyás, and Jenő Zsolt Farkas. 2021. "Tourism Perspectives in National Parks—A Hungarian Case Study from the Aspects of Rural Development" Sustainability 13, no. 21: 12002. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112002
APA StyleKovács, A. D., Gulyás, P., & Farkas, J. Z. (2021). Tourism Perspectives in National Parks—A Hungarian Case Study from the Aspects of Rural Development. Sustainability, 13(21), 12002. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112002