ABSTRACT

The dynamics of trust and distrust are central to understanding modern society, social relations, and development processes. However, numerous studies suggest that societal trust and citizen’s trust in government and its institutions are on the decline, challenging the legitimacy of government and leading to an undemocratic and unsustainable form of development. Recognizing its importance, the authors for the first time situate trust within the context of tourism development and planning.

This volume discusses trust in tourism from different yet intrinsically connected perspectives. Chapters review how diminishing societal trust may have adversely affected tourism planning systems, the role of trust in good tourism governance and sustainable tourism, how trust can be used as a facilitator of participatory tourism planning, political trust in tourism institutions, power and how tourism development can be a basis for trust creation among society members by using social capital theory. In addition, a final section on ‘Researching Trust in Tourism Development’ means that readers are not only provided a thorough theoretical framework on trust and an understanding of its importance for sustainable tourism and good governance of the sector, but also methodological aspects of research on trust in the context of tourism development and planning. 

This significant volume is valuable reading for students, academics and researchers interested in tourism development and planning.

chapter 6|25 pages

Tourism planning and human security

Knowledge and intervention construction and trust in “solving” environmental change

chapter 7|32 pages

Centrally formulated tourism development plans

Evaluations, attitudes, and behaviors of excluded community members

chapter 8|25 pages

Correlates of political trust and support for tourism

Development of a conceptual framework

chapter 9|12 pages

Researching trust in tourism

Methodological issues and associated concerns