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Do destinations have multiple lifecycles?

Bob McKercher1, IpKin Anthony Wong2

  • 1School of Hotel and Tourism Management the Hong Kong Polytechnic University Hung Hong, Kowloon Hong Kong, SAR, China.

Tourism Management
|October 5, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Destinations exhibit multiple lifecycles, not just one. This study identifies six distinct patterns, revealing networked lifecycles and introducing the concept of destination coevolution.

Keywords:
ButlerCoevolutionDestination evolutionLifecycle

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Area of Science:

  • Tourism Management
  • Destination Lifecycle Theory
  • Economic Geography

Background:

  • The traditional destination lifecycle model assumes a single, linear progression for tourism destinations.
  • Empirical evidence for multiple, concurrent lifecycles within a destination network remains limited.
  • Understanding destination evolution is crucial for sustainable tourism development and strategic planning.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To empirically test the proposition that tourism destinations can experience multiple lifecycles.
  • To identify and categorize different lifecycle patterns observed in destination evolution.
  • To introduce and conceptualize 'destination coevolution' as a framework for understanding networked lifecycles.

Main Methods:

  • Analysis of tourist arrival data for over 200 countries and economies spanning 35 years.
  • Application of Butler's destination lifecycle parameters to map observed patterns.
  • Identification and classification of distinct lifecycle trajectories.

Main Results:

  • Six unique destination lifecycle patterns were identified, challenging the single-lifecycle paradigm.
  • Findings support Baggio's conceptual notation, indicating shared traits among destinations forming networked lifecycles.
  • Evidence suggests that destination lifecycles are not isolated but interconnected and co-evolving.

Conclusions:

  • Destination lifecycles are complex and can exhibit multiple, non-linear patterns.
  • The concept of 'destination coevolution' offers a new perspective on reciprocal lifecycle changes within destination clusters.
  • This research opens new avenues for studying networked destination development and interdependencies.