Residents’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Destination Recovery: The Case of Northern Cyprus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of Existing Literature
2.1. Sustaianble Tourism Development and Recovery
2.2. Tourism Destination Stakeholders’ Engagement and Collaboration
2.3. Marketing and Advertisement of Sustainable Tourism Development
2.4. The Northern Cyprus Context
3. Method and Materials
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Application of Grounded Theory
3.3. Interview Design and Informant Selection
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Result and Discussion
4.1. Disruption and Uncertainty
“COVID has caused so many problems for us both as managers of hotels and even for our employees. Because of the lockdown and restrictions, we have no market, thanks to the government subsidies, people would have gone hungry. But you know as business owners, you are only happy when you are doing well.”(I12)
“To be sincere, COVID caused so many problems. Like in my workplaces, many of my colleagues were asked to leave the job. I am among the lucky ones who escaped this axing but still the people have family to feed and people depending on them for survival. Still, we understand that the business on thrive on sustained patronage and with the necessary and mandatory lockdowns, it is a matter of time for everyone.”(I3)
4.2. Tourism Product Development
“Eco tourism is a big advantage especially for small island countries. Cyprus has an unspoiled geographical position. In this sense, large hotel businesses related to sustainable tourism management can unfortunately be a pressure factor. Regions such as Buyukkonuk, Dipkarpaz, Lefke and Güzelyurt in the north of Cyprus have the features that allow tourists to taste the country’s production activities in the name of cultural tastes. but TRNC tourism ministry could not determine a strategic plan in this direction, so there are big companies that can crush small businesses especially because planning can’t be done. however, if those big companies take steps with ecotourism, their customers will increase. In the promotion of the country in the new world, not luxury hotel management, but small eco-tourism, bungalovs or boutique hotels far from the city, the customers are more satisfied in the name of getting to know the people and the culture.”(I4).
“Our island can be considered as one of the most important tourism destinations. The landscape of the island makes it suitable for holidaying and recreational activities. However, as it is with most tourism destinations, human activities often attract environmental issues such as air pollution and depletion of the resources. Even more, the topography of our island is such that it is limited in resources, highly dependent on imports and also remotely located. Sustainable tourism such as agrotourism and ecotourism can minimize these challenges and also our island is a good place to promote sustainability. Sustainable tourism can serve an important role in attracting ecotourist and agrotourist to our island and I believed that we have the potential to develop this kind of tourism.”(I10).
4.3. Focused Advertisements
“During my interaction with tourist as tour guide before the pandemic, my main observation was that tourist got to know about North Cyprus through television advertisement and brochures and catalogs from travel agencies. What they love about North Cyprus is its local festivals like eco-tourism festival in Buyukkonuk, like grape festival, wine festival and their ability to participate in the creation of special events such as festival. In my opinion, if we are to recover from the current impacts of the pandemic, we must focus our advertisement effort in these areas where tourist consider as unique and important selling points for our island.”(I2)
“I have a lot Israelis come now, before the pandemic, the Israelis population was very big, they want a lot of things for family and kids, so, we make things like bread making and made lots of aprons for kids, the kids have aprons on, if they have long hair, they put some cover on, and people are fascinated about it, they think its Islamic thing, I said No, it’s not Islamic, its cultural, its village life and many visitors want to be part of this experience but we don’t have information accessible to them in their languages. The websites are in English, the Europeans can cope with that, but we need to focus on making the information available in the language of our expected visitors.”(I5)
4.4. Political Governance
“Cyprus, the name, the geography, the country in the history, 10,000 years ago, all the world knows it. The main problem is political. The main problem. Why? Because, your transportation, we have no direct flight here. No direct ships here. You have to touch down in Istanbul, Turkey or land in Larnaca, that means guest have to use their passports. The problem is political because our ecology, our cuisines, cultural places, heritage places, we have a lot of these. We have even intangible heritages but the problem is politics. The tourism industry here in North Cyprus, we have nearly three different models of tourism. The entertainment industry—the casino tourism, the mass tourism, the special interest tourism. Now! There is tourism ministry that make all the advertisement and associations that make their own For casino, only we have guest from Turkey and some of Greek-Cypriots from South. They use special advertising systems. They are so professional. They are trying to find, to catch, the rich men. And they are trying to send them some invitations and they are using popular artist, singers from turkey, making concerts and invite the special guest to the concerts. But the target is for them to play games. They pay their flight; they have to stay here free of charge but they must have to play for instance minimum of 10,000 dollars in casinos. This is the first principle for them and they are making the advertising only by letters and they are trying to find people who are rich. They are not trying to use newspaper or TV. They are not using it. Only face-to-face, word-of-mouth communication; because the people doesn’t like it mostly. For Cyprus, we do want to hear it to say come here to Cyprus for casinos; why? Why? Is not a good model for tourism industry; casino; always we lost; casino because when the people come here, they never use taxi, never use restaurants, never visit cultural heritage places, castles, museum, rent a car, they spend nothing for us, the industry, only hotels, casino hotels. Tourism ministry are not doing it too but they supporting the casinos underground for the taxes, for the charter, the prices.”(I4)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Informants ID | Sector | Informants’ Profile | Years of First Involvement | Experience of COVID-19 | Interview Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I1 | Accommodation | Owner of a 5-star hotel located in Bafra region of Northern Cyprus | 2009 | Yes | 40:11 |
I2 | Tour Operator | Owner of a viable tour operation in Famagusta; also a member of Tourism stakeholder committee | 2007 | Yes | 35:05 |
I3 | Accommodation | Employee of a casino hotel | 2015 | Yes | 30:01 |
I4 | Accommodation | Manager of a 5-star hotel in Kyrenia region of North Cyprus | 1991 | Yes | 1:10:08 |
I5 | Education | Education tourist, studying tourism management in Northern Cyprus | 2010 | Yes | 50:23 |
I6 | Policy Making | Member of the ministry of tourism | 2003 | Yes | 41:47 |
I7 | Policy Making | Member of Tourism Information office of North Cyprus | 2014 | Yes | 46:13 |
I8 | Transport | Employee of full-service airline operating local and international flights | 2017 | Yes | 41:50 |
I9 | Transport | Airport taxi driver | 2019 | Yes | 41:21 |
I10 | Tour Operator | Representative of a large tour operation in North Cyprus | 2013 | Yes | 38:14 |
I11 | Restaurant | Owner of a themed restaurants situated in the tourist attraction zone in Bafra | 2012 | Yes | 50:10 |
I12 | Accommodation | Manager of a casino hotel | 2016 | Yes | 32:12 |
I13 | Education | Professor of Tourism Management | 1993 | Yes | 30:02 |
Theme | Code | Sub-Code | No. of People Talking about It | No. of Quotes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Impacts | Disruption | Challenges of tourism employees | Job loss | 4 | 15 |
Reduced demands | 8 | 29 | |||
Stagnation | 10 | 30 | |||
Unpaid leave | 5 | 10 | |||
Business closure | 11 | 19 | |||
Challenges of tourism business owners | Uncertainties with regulations | 13 | 36 | ||
Haphazard patronage | 6 | 18 | |||
Loss of revenue | 8 | 22 | |||
Complete business collapse | 7 | 10 | |||
Business preparedness | Difficulty in sudden switch to digital platforms | 3 | 5 | ||
Lack of anticipation for such outbreak | 8 | 17 | |||
Questionable resilience and safety plans | 2 | 5 | |||
Recovery | Products | Diverse eco-friendly products | Mass Tourism | 8 | 30 |
Ecotourism | 9 | 18 | |||
Slow Tourism | 2 | 6 | |||
Dark Tourism | 7 | 11 | |||
Nature Tourism | 10 | 15 | |||
Agro Tourism | 4 | 4 | |||
Casino Tourism | 5 | 8 | |||
Focused Adverts | Strategic positioning of marketing campaigns | Governmental websites | 8 | 22 | |
Safety | 4 | 10 | |||
Movies/Screen tourism | 9 | 12 | |||
Brochures | 3 | 7 | |||
Celebrity/Brands | 6 | 14 | |||
International TVs | 5 | 8 | |||
Digital information centers | 4 | 4 | |||
Tourism agencies | 3 | 4 | |||
Political/ Governance | Governmental support | Transportation | 11 | 36 | |
Conflict/dispute | 5 | 10 | |||
Infrastructures | 6 | 15 |
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Seyedabolghasemi, M.A.; Kilic, H.; Avci, T.; Eluwole, K.K.; Lasisi, T.T. Residents’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Destination Recovery: The Case of Northern Cyprus. Land 2022, 11, 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11010094
Seyedabolghasemi MA, Kilic H, Avci T, Eluwole KK, Lasisi TT. Residents’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Destination Recovery: The Case of Northern Cyprus. Land. 2022; 11(1):94. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11010094
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeyedabolghasemi, Maryam Alsadat, Hasan Kilic, Turgay Avci, Kayode Kolawole Eluwole, and Taiwo Temitope Lasisi. 2022. "Residents’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Destination Recovery: The Case of Northern Cyprus" Land 11, no. 1: 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11010094
APA StyleSeyedabolghasemi, M. A., Kilic, H., Avci, T., Eluwole, K. K., & Lasisi, T. T. (2022). Residents’ Perceptions of Sustainable Tourism Destination Recovery: The Case of Northern Cyprus. Land, 11(1), 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11010094