Abstract

The introduction of the sharing economy has revolutionized resident-tourist relationships and provides further implications of destination sustainability. Built on several well-established theories, this conceptual study intends to develop a new and holistic framework to examine destination sustainability, focusing on the change of resident-tourist relationships. The framework is first guided by the stakeholder theory to identify the four key stakeholders in the new sharing economy context: residents, tourists, governments, and the sharing economy platform. With the collaboration theory and resource theory as a foundation, the framework then describes each stakeholder’s specific needs and resources. The service-dominant logic further supports service exchanges and value co-creation among stakeholders. The framework then adopts the capital theory approach to conceptualize destination sustainability in terms of human, social, natural and manufactured capital. Finally, three propositions are developed to justify the new peer-to-peer collaboration paradigm that leads to destination sustainability. The proposed framework is aligned with the six-pillar transformation in e-Tourism research and serves as an intelligent solution to destination sustainable development in the sharing economy context.

Highlights

  • The interaction between tourists and residents is fundamental to tourism destinations (Sharpley 2014)

  • This study intended to: (1) review relevant theories that provide the theoretical foundation for the resident-tourist relationship in the sharing economy context; (2) develop a conceptual framework of destination sustainability, and (3) justify destination sustainability from the capital theory approach

  • It will contribute to the sustainable literature in the sharing economy era and offer guidance in addressing the resident-tourist relationship

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Summary

Introduction

The interaction between tourists and residents is fundamental to tourism destinations (Sharpley 2014). The introduction of the sharing economy sheds light on the current clash by facilitating satisfying resident-tourist relationships and enhancing destination sustainability. The extant literature review indicates a lack of theoretically innovative studies on the resident-tourist relationship and its role in destination sustainability (Font and McCabe 2017). This study intended to: (1) review relevant theories that provide the theoretical foundation for the resident-tourist relationship in the sharing economy context; (2) develop a conceptual framework of destination sustainability, and (3) justify destination sustainability from the capital theory approach. It will contribute to the sustainable literature in the sharing economy era and offer guidance in addressing the resident-tourist relationship

Literature Review and Theoretical Foundation
Collaboration Theory
Resource Theory
Service-Dominant Logic
Capital Theory Approach to Sustainability
A Conceptual Framework of Destination Sustainability
Theoretical Implications
Practical Implications
Limitations and Future
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