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HERITAGE CONSERVATION POLICY IN THE AGE OF TOURISM: DEVELOPING FRAMEWORKS FOR CONSERVATION, MANAGEMENT, AND SUSTAINABILITY IN PHILIPPINE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS - THE CASE OF THE CITY OF SAN FERNANDO, PAMPANGAIvan Anthony Santos Henares (11778923) 03 December 2021 (has links)
<p>With the
increased role of local authorities in creating cultural policy, gathering
information on how successful and sustainable local heritage conservation
programs are established will be very valuable in crafting future policies. This
dissertation investigated the development of local government heritage
conservation policies in the City of San Fernando, Pampanga in the Philippines
in order to determine (1) predictors of community support for heritage
conservation policy – why communities support heritage conservation policy and
what characteristics or elements of communities lead them to support heritage
conservation policies, (2) factors that lead to the adoption and implementation
of heritage conservation policies or policy drivers of heritage conservation
policy, and (3) given the deeper understanding of community support and policy
drivers, the relationship between these predictors and drivers with heritage
conservation policy management and sustainability. It did this by being
cognizant of the lack of homogeneity across communities, with actors, factors,
contexts, and nuances specific to each community.</p><p>Implementing
two component studies, the dissertation used mixed methods, which interprets
and integrates information drawn from the combined strength of both
quantitative and qualitative data, following the
convergent design (Creswell and Plano Clark, 2018; Harrison et al., 2020) and guided
by the Rigorous Mixed Methods framework (Harrison, Reilly and Creswell, 2020). This
first study used a self-administered online survey to collect data from stakeholders
and ordinary residents of the City of San Fernando, Pampanga which was analyzed
using Structural Equation Modelling (SEM). In the second study, guided by the
naturalist paradigm (Guba and Lincoln, 1982; Lincoln and Guba, 1985),
transcripts of semi-structured interviews conducted by City Tourism and
Investment Promotion Office (CTIPO) were coded and analyzed using the grounded
theory approach. It combined several coding approaches, specifically a blended
approach (Skjott Linneberg, and Korsgaard, 2006), with the the Gioia
Methodology (Gioia et al., 2012) and Ünlü-Qureshi instrument (Qureshi and Ünlü,
2020)</p>
<p>The
integration of qualitative and quantitative data and results was guided by the
dimensions of the mixed methods research integration trilogy (Fetters and
Molina-Azorin, 2017). The
dissertation identified predictors for community support for heritage conservation
policy, policy drivers of the heritage conservation policy process, and the
relationship between these predictors and drivers and within the heritage
conservation policy process and produced three models: (1) predictors of
community support for local heritage
conservation policy, (2) heritage conservation policy drivers, and (3) managerial
implications for heritage conservation policy sustainability, and a framework
for heritage conservation, management, and sustainability. The data suggested
that in the case of San Fernando, (1) knowledge and awareness, (2) sense of
belonging and attachment, (3) place image and community identity, and (4)
evaluation of value are predictors of support for heritage conservation
policies, with evaluation of value as a mediator for the first three. It also identified two major
policy drivers: (1) good governance, and (2) heritage consciousness, and six specific
policy drivers: (1) understanding the dynamics of heritage conservation, (2) addressing
program sustainability, (3) stakeholder integration in the policy process, (4) appreciation
of process-oriented governance, (5) manifesting pride and attachment, and (6) awareness
of long-term outcomes of policies, that serve as factors leading to the
adoption and implementation of heritage conservation policies. The predictors
and policy drivers were incorporated into a single framework for heritage
conservation policy management and sustainability.</p>
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Black Food Trucks Matter: A Qualitative Study Examining The (Mis)Representation, Underestimation, and Contribution of Black Entrepreneurs In The Food Truck IndustryAriel D Smith (14223191) 11 August 2023 (has links)
<p>Food trucks have become increasingly popular over the last decade following the Great Recession of 2008. Scholars have begun to study the food truck phenomenon, its future projected trajectory, and even positioning it within social justice discourse along cultural lines; however, scholarship has yet to address the participation of Black entrepreneurs in the food truck industry.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>The objective of this dissertation is to expand the perception of Black food entrepreneurs within the food truck industry by interrogating how Black food truck owners are misrepresented, under analyzed, and underestimated. Using a series of interdisciplinary qualitative methods including introspective analysis, thematic coding analysis, and case studies, I approach this objective by addressing three questions. First, I analyze movies and television to understand where Black-owned food trucks are represented in popular culture and how they are depicted. In doing so, we come to understand that Black business representation, specifically Black food truck representation consistently falls victim to negative stereotypes. These stereotypes can influence the extent to which Black food truck owners are taken seriously and seen as legitimate business leaders in their community. Second, I interview 16 Black food truck entrepreneurs to understand why the mobile food industry appealed to them and how it has become a platform for them to explore other opportunities. Finally, I review eight cities that have launched Black food truck festivals and parks within the last 6 years to gain an understanding of the collective power wielded by Black food truck owners and its impact Black communities. Moreover, this dissertation challenges the myth that collectivism does not exist among Black entrepreneurs and the Black community broadly.</p>
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