Coupling coordination and spatiotemporal dynamic evolution between culture and tourism industry in Japan

  • 0School of Land Resources and Environment, Jiangxi Agricultural University, Nanchang, China.

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Summary

This summary is machine-generated.

Japan's culture and tourism industry shows strengthened integration and a positive development trend. However, spatial distribution remains unbalanced, with high concentration in Tokyo and Osaka, and low levels in peripheral regions.

Area Of Science

  • Tourism Studies
  • Cultural Economics
  • Regional Science

Background

  • The tourism industry requires transformation and product upgrades, necessitating research into culture-tourism integration.
  • Understanding the spatial and temporal dynamics of cultural and tourism development is crucial for strategic planning.

Purpose Of The Study

  • To analyze the integrated development level of Japan's cultural and tourism industry from 2009 to 2019.
  • To investigate the spatial association patterns and temporal trends of this integrated development.

Main Methods

  • Coupling coordination degree model for assessing integrated development.
  • Spatial kernel density estimation to identify high-density areas.
  • Spatial cluster analysis to understand spatial correlation patterns.

Main Results

  • A strengthening relationship between culture and tourism over time, with a positive overall development trend.
  • Notable rising development in Tokyo and Osaka, contrasting with stable trends in other regions.
  • An unbalanced spatial distribution pattern, characterized by high development in central areas and lower levels in peripheral regions.
  • Significant positive spatial agglomeration, particularly in economically advanced regions like Tokyo and Osaka, with low-low agglomeration in northern and southern areas.

Conclusions

  • Japan's culture and tourism industry exhibits a positive but spatially uneven development trajectory.
  • Economically advanced regions are key hubs for cultural and tourism industry concentration.
  • Policy interventions may be needed to address regional disparities in cultural and tourism development.

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