Unethical use of wildlife in tourism: what's the problem, who is responsible, and what can be done?

被引:105
作者
Moorhouse, Tom [1 ]
D'Cruze, Neil C. [1 ,2 ]
Macdonald, David W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Recanati Kaplan Ctr, Dept Zool, Wildlife Conservat Res Unit, Tubney House, Tubney, England
[2] World Anim Protect, 222 Grays Inn Rd, London, England
关键词
Wildlife tourist attraction; regulation; animal welfare; conservation; attitude-behaviour gap; TripAdvisor; BEHAVIOR; CONSERVATION; CONSUMERS; INTENTIONS; FRAMEWORK; ATTITUDES; WELFARE; ETHICS; GAP;
D O I
10.1080/09669582.2016.1223087
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Wildlife tourism is a huge global market, the revenue from which can promote local livelihoods and tourist education, enact conservation, and improve animal welfare. Such benefits arise if wildlife tourist attractions (WTAs) prioritise ethical deliverables above financial profit, but recent work has shown that the majority of WTAs have substantial negative animal welfare and conservation impacts. In the absence of global regulatory authorities, tourist revenue has become the ultimate arbiter of what constitutes acceptable use of animals in WTAs. Tourists, however, are not adequate assessors of WTAs' animal welfare and conservation impacts: they lack the specialist knowledge required and are subject to a number of psychological biases that obscure the ethical dimensions of decisions to attend particular WTAs. This inadequacy is evidenced, and compounded, by overwhelmingly positive reviews on TripAdvisor (the industry-leading review site), even for WTAs with objectively poor ethical standards. Our suggested solution is to empower tourists by presenting unequivocal assessments of WTAs' animal welfare and conservation impacts, hosted in the fora that tourists already use to make their travel decisions. We would thereby promote a subjective norm that tourists should consider and limit their individual negative impacts when choosing which WTAs to visit.
引用
收藏
页码:505 / 516
页数:12
相关论文
共 70 条
[21]   Developing an extended Theory of Planned Behavior model to predict consumers' intention to visit green hotels [J].
Chen, Mei-Fang ;
Tung, Pei-Ju .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT, 2014, 36 :221-230
[22]  
Cowe R., 2000, WHO ARE ETHICAL CONS
[23]   A Cultural Perspective on Wildlife Tourism in China [J].
Cui Qingming ;
Xu Honggang ;
Wall, Geoffrey .
TOURISM RECREATION RESEARCH, 2012, 37 (01) :27-36
[24]  
Curtin S., 2007, International Journal of Tourism Research, V9, P131, DOI 10.1002/jtr.599
[25]  
Curtin S., 2006, International Journal of Tourism Research, V8, P301, DOI 10.1002/jtr.577
[26]   Responsible tourist behaviour: The role of social engagement [J].
Diallo, Mbaye Fall ;
Diop-Sall, Fatou ;
Leroux, Erick ;
Valette-Florence, Pierre .
RECHERCHE ET APPLICATIONS EN MARKETING-ENGLISH EDITION, 2015, 30 (03) :85-104
[27]   The moral basis for conservation: how is it affected by culture? [J].
Dickman, Amy ;
Johnson, Paul J. ;
van Kesteren, Freya ;
Macdonald, David W. .
FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2015, 13 (06) :325-331
[28]  
Duffy R, 2008, J SUSTAIN TOUR, V16, P327, DOI 10.1080/09669580802154124
[29]   ON THE MOTIVATIONAL NATURE OF COGNITIVE-DISSONANCE - DISSONANCE AS PSYCHOLOGICAL DISCOMFORT [J].
ELLIOT, AJ ;
DEVINE, PG .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1994, 67 (03) :382-394
[30]  
Fennell D.A., 2006, TOURISM ETHICS