Tourism as a Rural Development Strategy: Finding Consensus in Resident Attitudes

Document Type

Article

Journal/Book Title/Conference

Tennessee Agri-Science

Volume

176

Publication Date

1995

First Page

22

Last Page

29

Abstract

A survey of community leaders, broadly categorized as business people, public officials and conservationists, was conducted to assess attitudes toward tourism in a six-county region of the Southern Appalachian Highlands of Tennessee and North Carolina. Broad support for tourism development was found across all groups, with the caveat that economic growth not take place at the expense of community character or environmental quality. In general, however, members of conservation organizations were more concerned about the negative impacts of tourism development than were business people or public officials. The methodology employed highlights issues of agreement and conflict among influential community groups. This approach can help communities engage in a consensus-building process and plan a sustainable tourism-based development strategy that is acceptable to all groups.

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