Placemaking and Tourism to Build Resilience: A Quest for Sustaining Peripheral Island Communities in Taiwan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review and Discussion
2.1. Effects of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Placemaking
2.2. Sustainability and Resilience
3. Research Ideas, Methods, and Selected Communities
3.1. Research Ideas
3.2. Research Methods
3.2.1. Literature Review
3.2.2. Textual Analysis
3.2.3. Environmental Surveys
3.2.4. In-Depth Interviews
3.3. Two Newly Developed Communities in Penghu Islands of Taiwan
3.3.1. Overview of the Nanliao Community
3.3.2. Overview of Xihu Community
4. Mixed Placemaking for Development (Recovery)
4.1. Nanliao Originates from the Agent of the Local Government
4.2. Xihu Originated from Developers with a Dual Identity
4.3. Adaptive Development (Recovery) Increases Resilience in Nanliao and Xihu
4.3.1. Combining the CDA and the Township Office as a Public Sphere
4.3.2. Continuing to Win Various Prizes and Monetary Awards for Self-Motivation
4.3.3. Targeting Civil Servants as a Talent Pool for Community Development
5. Charity Tourism for Stability
5.1. Visits to Nanliao Act as Environmental Education Tours
5.2. Visiting Xihu Plays as Company Tours
5.3. Cooperative Stability Increases Resilience in Nanliao and Xihu
5.3.1. Searching Niche Tourist Market
5.3.2. Developing Specific Sources of Tourists
5.3.3. Flexible Income in Tourism Economies
6. Online Interaction for Transformation
6.1. The Local Professional Team Manages Social Media Interaction in Nanliao
6.2. The Off-Site Academic Team Maintains Social Media Interaction in Xihu
6.3. Simultaneous Transformation Increases Resilience in Nanliao and Xihu
6.3.1. Creating Low-Threshold Spaces for Rational and Emotional Dialogue
6.3.2. Encouraging Clear Breadth and Depth by Activity Issues
6.3.3. Empowering Off-Site Residents and Potential Tourists
7. Conclusions
- Both communities have experienced their own adaptive development. The Nanliao community used its island government to execute transformative placemaking and derive benefits, whereas the Xihu community achieved transformation through a union of local developers. Both cases progressed toward adaptation rather than the previous individual standard of development. Furthermore, through the joint operation of CDAs and village offices, these islands have won a series of awards and grants and secured public servants as a talent pool to further community development, thereby creating a new, third path for community development and emancipatory results. This can also be considered the starting point for transforming the political weaknesses of islands and serves as a reference for other peripheral islands;
- These two communities have already become linked to a wide range of alternative tourism markets and have adopted charity tourism based on their specific sources of tourists. Furthermore, they used community economy methods, such as cooperative and flexible revenue sources, as a third option to reduce the vulnerability of island economies and increase resilience. By meeting the supply and demand in charity tourism markets, these two communities can flexibly increase revenue and create flexible tourism work opportunities. Although these island communities are unable to completely resolve issues of unfavorable economic structures in their island communities, they are gradually recovering from the decline in agricultural and fishing economies and searching for means of resistance in the economic space. However, both cases remain dependent on shifts in government policies and the support of private-sector urban workers. It seems that peripheral island communities remain an extension of the core of regional development and find it difficult to exist independently of the global system. This finding echoed the arguments of this study that the theory of resilience can guide globalized action on islands and actively lead peripheral island communities in the future;
- Both communities have taken advantage of global Internet connections to create a financially marginal but socially beneficial channel for their communities. By creating a low-threshold space for rational and emotional dialogue; encouraging attractive, broad, and in-depth activities and topics; and cooperating with off-site specialized cooperative agencies, they have achieved their core objectives of decentralization and subverted development. In doing so, these communities have become members of a globally connected society. This study also found that placemaking innovation is important. Placemaking does not necessarily rely only on a community’s own local developers but can also include externally connected local governments or external resource channels. These include large private sector companies in core cities and funding from NGOs and NGO/NPOs or human resource supplements as a third path for increasing resilience.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ni, C.-C.; Say, D. Placemaking and Tourism to Build Resilience: A Quest for Sustaining Peripheral Island Communities in Taiwan. Sustainability 2023, 15, 699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010699
Ni C-C, Say D. Placemaking and Tourism to Build Resilience: A Quest for Sustaining Peripheral Island Communities in Taiwan. Sustainability. 2023; 15(1):699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010699
Chicago/Turabian StyleNi, Chin-Cheng, and Dietermar Say. 2023. "Placemaking and Tourism to Build Resilience: A Quest for Sustaining Peripheral Island Communities in Taiwan" Sustainability 15, no. 1: 699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010699
APA StyleNi, C. -C., & Say, D. (2023). Placemaking and Tourism to Build Resilience: A Quest for Sustaining Peripheral Island Communities in Taiwan. Sustainability, 15(1), 699. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010699