Difference between revisions of "Community-Based Eco-Tourism on the Wild Coast, South Africa: The Case of the Amadiba Trail, (Zolile Ntshona, Edward Lahif, 2003)"

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(Created page with "Type of Publication Interview Language German Where to Find? https://www.wanderforschung.de/files/interview-nna_1707162011.pdf Abstract or Summary Hardly anyone knows more...")
 
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Type of Publication
Interview


Language
= Type of Publication =
German
Research Paper


Where to Find?
= Language =
https://www.wanderforschung.de/files/interview-nna_1707162011.pdf
English


Abstract or Summary
= Where to Find? =
Hardly anyone knows more about hiking trails than Rainer Brämer. The natural sociologist designs premium routes. Here he explains why we act like our ancestors thousands of years ago when hiking. (Translated by Microsoft Translator)
https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.945.9670&rep=rep1&type=pdf


Relevance
= Abstract or Summary =
Check out this resource if you want to know:
This paper investigates the origins and current operation of the Amadiba Horse and Hiking Trail, a community-based initiative located on South Africa’s Wild Coast. The trail project presents itself as a people-centred, designed to involve the Amadiba people in all aspects of running a project including planning, implementation, management and decision making. The benefits from the project are intended to accrue primarily to the Amadiba community. The involvement of a non-profit organisation, PondoCROP, in initiating the project, and the involvement of community representatives in operation and management, presented an alternative to large-scale investor driven development that could supplement, rather than replace, existing livelihood strategies. The key objective of this study is to investigate the actual involvement of the community in decision making processes, planning, management, control of the project, and also the kinds of benefits which accrue to the staff members, horse owners and the wider community. The evidence of this study would suggest the project has been at least partially successful in achieving its goals, but also raises questions about the model of a community-run project being applied in this case, and about the long-term economic sustainability of the project. This case study also highlights a number of key strengths and weaknesses of the community-based or bottom-up model of tourism development.


the reality behind the 'hiking boom' and when did it start;
= Relevance =
what makes a good hiking trail;
to be added
why women often let the men lead hiking groups;
the hiking experience of runners;
the perspective of foresters and nature conservatives on mountain bilkers, runners and hunters; and
the impact of hiking on tourism
Bibliographical Data
Interviewee: Rainer Brämer
Interviewer: Matthias Lohr / HNA Sieben
Title (original): "Ein guter Wanderweg braucht den Mystery-Effekt"
Title in English: "A good hiking trail needs the mystery effect"
Year: 2017
Publisher: Wanderforschung.de
English Transcript
Partial translation using Microsoft Translator.


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= Bibliographical Data =
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This page was last edited on 6 August 2022, at 16:43.
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Revision as of 19:25, 10 August 2022

Type of Publication

Research Paper

Language

English

Where to Find?

https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.945.9670&rep=rep1&type=pdf

Abstract or Summary

This paper investigates the origins and current operation of the Amadiba Horse and Hiking Trail, a community-based initiative located on South Africa’s Wild Coast. The trail project presents itself as a people-centred, designed to involve the Amadiba people in all aspects of running a project including planning, implementation, management and decision making. The benefits from the project are intended to accrue primarily to the Amadiba community. The involvement of a non-profit organisation, PondoCROP, in initiating the project, and the involvement of community representatives in operation and management, presented an alternative to large-scale investor driven development that could supplement, rather than replace, existing livelihood strategies. The key objective of this study is to investigate the actual involvement of the community in decision making processes, planning, management, control of the project, and also the kinds of benefits which accrue to the staff members, horse owners and the wider community. The evidence of this study would suggest the project has been at least partially successful in achieving its goals, but also raises questions about the model of a community-run project being applied in this case, and about the long-term economic sustainability of the project. This case study also highlights a number of key strengths and weaknesses of the community-based or bottom-up model of tourism development.

Relevance

to be added

Bibliographical Data

  • Author: Edward Lahif
  • Title: Community-Based Eco-Tourism on the Wild Coast, South Africa: The Case of the Amadiba Trail
  • Year: 2003
  • Publisher: Sustainable Livelihoods in South Africa