Sustainable Coastal Business Strategies for Cultured Pearl Sectors: Agenda Development for Coast-Area Actors’ Collaboration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Research Gaps and Rationale of the Study
1.2. Research Questions
- (1)
- What measures are necessary to maintain the sustainability of the cultured pearl businesses in coastal areas?
- (2)
- Is it an effective measure to promote stakeholder collaboration for the development of the cultured pearl businesses? If so, what factors should be taken into consideration?
- (3)
- Can cultured pearls be an attraction for tourism in the area?
2. The Cultured Pearl Industry in Japan: Ise-Shima Area
2.1. History and Discussion of the Japanese Cultured Pearl Industry
2.2. Pearls as the Value for the Sustainable Local Economy
2.3. Tourist Attraction Stimulus: Luxury Value of Pearl Products and Sustainable Development
2.4. Conceptualization of Synergies among Stakeholders: Necesity of Collaboration
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Approach
3.2. Participants and Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Extraction and Comparison of Key Themes in the Textual Data
4.2. Detailed Comments from Stakeholders
4.2.1. Respect and Maintenance of the History and Tradition of the Cultured Pearl Industry
4.2.2. Cultured Pearls as Community-Centered Value
4.2.3. Pearls and Tourism: Ecological System in Society
4.2.4. Future Perspectives: How to Sustain Local Economy with Small Businesses
4.3. Discusssion
- (1)
- Co-creation of value through collaboration among relevant stakeholders in coastal areas in an open relationship could be one catalyst for maintaining the sustainability of cultured pearl operations in coastal areas. In particular, given the fact that tourists are aware of the value of the coastal satoumi, or the broader community that encompasses the cultured pearl site, as an attractive place to visit, and that the host residents are highly sympathetic to and confident in the value of pearls as jewellery, a more refined inbound strategy should be based on this, and it can be expected that there is much room for more refined inbound strategy planning and demand.
- (2)
- In conjunction with the above responses, while it is important to promote collaboration among stakeholders for the development of the cultured pearl business, local residents and industry participants suggest that the Japanese-developed innovation of cultured pearls, the true round pearl technology, could be more globally appealing as a made-in-Japan technology. In addition, the recent intervention of the public sector, such as the revision of laws, can be expected to have the effect of accelerating the coordination and collaboration of these parties involved in the pearl industry.
- (3)
- Based on the responses to RQs 1 and 2 above, cultured pearls can be expected to become an attraction for tourism in the region. However, in order to achieve this, it may be necessary to modernize the aquaculture industry as an industry, solve succession problems, and take the initiative in providing support for promotion by the public sector, as indicated by the keywords of the parties involved extracted in Figure 2, through interventions such as promotional support and other factors in order to achieve a united support policy.
5. Conclusions, Implications, and Limitations
5.1. Theoretical Contributions
5.2. Practical Contributions
5.3. Limitations and Further Research Oppotunitiy
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Key Topics and Main Stakeholders | Sub Themes for Research Questions |
---|---|
1. Respect and maintenance of the history and tradition of the cultured pearl industry | Can local cultured pearl business be a basis for inbound tourism? |
What are the stakeholders’ future perspectives for cultured pearl? | |
What are the main perceived values of cultured pearls in coastal area? | |
2. Impact of the value of cultured pearls on the local economy | Can the values of luxurious pearls be driving power to sustain the business? |
Are the pearls valuable for the community (community bonding and cohesion as a local asset)? | |
Can the cohesion between cultured pearls and local tourism be key trigger for business sustainability? | |
3. Pearls and tourism (Tourism-related organizations) | Is there a potential relationship between cultured pearls and inbound tourism? |
Do the stakeholders perceive dynamism of cultured pearl businesses and inbound tourism? | |
4. Future perspectives and required interventions (businesses, regional authorities, and tourism-related organizations) | Can the cultured pearl industry be effective in sustaining the local community? |
What elements are essential for sustaining the coastal region based on the cultured pearl businesses? | |
Who are the key actors in sustaining both local cultured pearl businesses and the local tourism based on the cultured pearl industry? |
FG1 | |
---|---|
1: Tourist (Tokyo) | Male, 58 years old |
2: Pearl producer | Male, 48 years old |
3. Tourist office | Male, 36 years old |
4. Local business authority | Male, 46 years old |
5. Local council | Female, 39 years old |
6. Local resident | Female, 35 years old |
FG2 | |
7. Tourist (Tokyo) | Female, 61 years old |
8. Pearl producer | Male, 62 years old |
9. Tourist agency | Female, 45 years old |
10. Local adviser (university researcher) | Female, 37 years old |
11. Local council | Male, 43 years old |
12. Local resident | Male, 48 years old |
FG3 | |
13. Tourist (Yokohama) | Female, 29 years old |
14. Pearl producer | Male, 56 years old |
15. Tour company | Male, 41 years old |
16. Local council | Female, 36 years old |
17. Local resident | Male, 49 years old |
18. Local resident | Female, 42 years old |
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Oe, H.; Yamaoka, Y. Sustainable Coastal Business Strategies for Cultured Pearl Sectors: Agenda Development for Coast-Area Actors’ Collaboration. Coasts 2022, 2, 341-354. https://doi.org/10.3390/coasts2040017
Oe H, Yamaoka Y. Sustainable Coastal Business Strategies for Cultured Pearl Sectors: Agenda Development for Coast-Area Actors’ Collaboration. Coasts. 2022; 2(4):341-354. https://doi.org/10.3390/coasts2040017
Chicago/Turabian StyleOe, Hiroko, and Yasuyuki Yamaoka. 2022. "Sustainable Coastal Business Strategies for Cultured Pearl Sectors: Agenda Development for Coast-Area Actors’ Collaboration" Coasts 2, no. 4: 341-354. https://doi.org/10.3390/coasts2040017
APA StyleOe, H., & Yamaoka, Y. (2022). Sustainable Coastal Business Strategies for Cultured Pearl Sectors: Agenda Development for Coast-Area Actors’ Collaboration. Coasts, 2(4), 341-354. https://doi.org/10.3390/coasts2040017