This study investigates tourism implicit conflict and its spatial dynamics in rural China. Using PPGIS mapping and semi-structured interviews, it reveals that conflict perceptions vary significantly based on residential location (core, expanded, peripheral areas). Core and peripheral areas experienced economic and cultural conflicts, while expanded areas showed more concern for tourism governance. The study introduces 'spatial relative deprivation' to explain these varying perceptions.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Sep 27, 2024
Authors
Yangyang Li, Xiao Feng, Yang Gao, Zhenbin Zhao
Tags
tourism
conflict
rural China
spatial dynamics
PPGIS mapping
governance
relative deprivation
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