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Articles

A critical examination of indigenous people, tourism and quality of life

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Pages 267-278 | Received 02 Jul 2018, Accepted 13 Mar 2019, Published online: 11 Apr 2019
 

ABSTRACT

An increased demand for indigenous tourism experiences has led to increased contact between tourists and indigenous people, influencing aspects of their quality of life (QOL). This discussion paper examines tourism impacts on QOL in host communities from indigenous perspectives, with a particular focus on indigenous Fijian societies. While sharing similarities in QOL priorities, Indigenous Fijian communities reflected differences as they prioritized their vanua and cultural traditions within their QOL space. Environmental protection, kinship, solesolevaki(social capital) were prioritized from an indigenous Fijian perspective. These findings challenge current QOL definitions, highlighting the need for culturally informed classifications. This attention is critical to ensure that indigenous communities that have become tourism-active achieve sustainable tourism development. More indigenous ethnographic studies are needed to ensure greater understanding of tourism’s impacts on QOL, so that inherent costs are minimized and benefits are maximized. A more comprehensive understanding of indigenous tourism, specifically one that takes into account the needs and values of its stakeholders which relate to their QOL is needed. An integrated approach that considers indigenous values and cultural priorities is recommended for consideration in contemporary tourism and QOL frameworks in order to create an enhanced QOL paradigm that is applicable across cultures and communities.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Ms Ilisapeci Matatolu is an indigenous Fijian academic with extensive destination tourism marketing experience. Prior to embarking on her academic career, she worked for Fiji’s national tourist office Tourism Fiji and worked in Australia, United States and Fiji. She completed her Honors Degree in Tourism from James Cook University in Queensland, Australia and her Masters in Tourism in Hospitality Management at the University of the South Pacific, where she is currently part of the School of Tourism and Hospitality Management team. Her research interests include indigenous tourism, women and QOL, indigenous micro entrepreneurship, tourism mobility, AR and VR in tourism education.

ORCID

Ilisapeci Matatolu http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9410-215X

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