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Community participation in urban tourism development : a case study - Georgetown and the freedom experience.Speirs, Karl Bryan. January 2000 (has links)
Since the reintroduction of South Africa into the international community, tourism has been
emphasised, through policy and public speech, as a means to achieve socio-economic
upliftment and job creation. Although tourism has potential to contribute to a country's wellbeing,
its implementation may introduce many complexities and potentially undesirable
consequences.
One way of alleviating some of the negative consequences of tourism, is through sufficiently
involving communities in the tourism development and execution process. Most often the
emphasis on involving local communities in tourism development has been rural based. The
move to include previously disadvantaged urban communities, has been less well articulated.
Local government authorities have only recently been given responsibility for both community
involved tourism development and local economic development, and are therefore still
formulating their approach to address these issues. Within KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) there are
relatively few government projects currently concentrating on community-based tourism in
urban and peri-urban areas. This project looks at one of these initiatives to build a case for
sustainable community-based urban tourism.
The Freedom Experience is a predominantly urban-based heritage tourism initiative proposed
by the Pietermaritzburg-Msunduzi Transitional Local Council for development within
Pietermaritzburg and surrounding areas. Georgetown is a previously neglected area falling
within this region and is used as a case study to explore the process of participation in urban
tourism development. The key stakeholders involved in tourism development within KZN are
ascertained and interviewed. Difficulties and opportunities are identified for community-based
urban tourism development in general, and for the case study area in particular.
Due to idiosyncratic characteristics of individual situations and communities, any specified
procedure for community participation, and any organization involved with its
implementation, needs to be flexible. A process is, suggested, which attempts to avoid the
dualistic nature of either top-down or bottom-up approaches to tourism development. It introduces a less rigid approach, which breaks from the view that decision-making needs to
be conceptualised within a hierarchical context. Communication and decision-making
responsibility and accountability are shared between various levels. An approach is presented,
which supports small scale community and tourism development projects linking into an
overarching development framework.
This approach should result in sustainable development, bringing community benefits which
can be immediately effective. It advocates the establishment of self-supporting enterprises
which function successfully, independent of tourist demand. In this way contributing to the
fulfilment of socio-economic, job creation and related capacity building objectives, without
relying on an influx of tourists from a historically disloyal and unpredictable consumer base. / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2000.
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