Abstract

The aim of this work is to study the conditions for developing the entrepreneurial ecosystem of regional tourism at the external border of the European Union, in Poland, and its contact points with two non-Union countries (Belarus, Ukraine). The research used a literature review, qualitative and quantitative analyses of the conditions for the development of entrepreneurial ecosystems, interviews with local ecosystem actors and the author’s own observations. The eastern border of Poland (formerly with the USSR) created a barrier to the socio-economic development of adjacent regions. Their peripheral nature has allowed preserving their precious nature value and multicultural heritage. Currently, this preservation constitutes grounds for sustainably developing the region’s tourism. The primary actors of the tourism-based entrepreneurial ecosystem are local governments, public institutions, non-governmental organisations and entrepreneurs. An impetus for activities thereof was granted by Poland’s accession to the EU and its access to Union funds, which has reinforced tourism infrastructure by contributing to the establishment of new tourism enterprises. Furthermore, the development of tourism in the region could also be favoured by the close neighbourhood of as many as two other countries; however, and unfortunately, the border is still a barrier. Apart from the lack of infrastructure allowing borders crossings, political instability in neighbouring countries—made explicitly visible at the border with Belarus in 2021—threatens border-driven tourism by restricting tourism entrepreneurship, especially in those activities based on the access to the border.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe presence of borders determined the peripheral nature of regions there situated

  • Border areas constitute special places for developing tourism [1,2]

  • Border protection considerations have influenced the poor development of economic activity, low employment rates and even limited access for persons without permanent residence [3]; they have hindered or prevented tourism development

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The presence of borders determined the peripheral nature of regions there situated. A change in the functioning of border processes was initiated in Europe, in the 1950s, and, together with the development of European integration, contributed to opening border regions [4]. These processes took place in Western Europe, along with political and economic transformations that began at the turn of the 1980s and 1990s, covering Central and Eastern Europe countries. Tourism became an opportunity for the sustainable development of regions previously determined as peripheral for being situated at borders [5,6]. The uniqueness of, at least, some border regions owes to the richness of their multicultural heritages, having been shaped, for ages, by neighbouring representatives of various nationalities, cultures and religions [2]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call