Exploring the Factors of Rural Tourism Recovery in the Post-COVID-19 Era Based on the Grounded Theory: A Case Study of Tianxi Village in Hunan Province, China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Crises in Tourism
2.2. Tourism Recovery
2.3. Evolution Resilience
3. Method
3.1. Tianxi Village
3.2. Data Collection
3.3. Data Analysis
3.3.1. Open and Axial Coding
3.3.2. Selective Coding
4. Findings
4.1. Governance Capability of Local Government
“We are the key national rural tourism village. The government could provide some continuous funding, policy support to invest in infrastructure construction, especially after the epidemic.”(A2)
“Both our party branch and young people have been involved in prevention and control. One is to follow the requirements to do our prevention and control, including temperature testing and mask disinfection, and the other is to prepare for the resumption of production.”(A1)
4.2. Robustness of Rural Social Networks
“After the outbreak of the COVID-19 epidemic, the tourism development in my hometown was suspended. With the feelings of my hometown in mind, we discussed how to contribute to the rural development and open up a new road of tourism development.”(A7)
“Isolation at home may reduce our physical contact, but the communication between neighbors is more frequent than before. Some information will be shared, such as policies of open scenic spot. I think we are a team.”(A11)
“The tourism income of our village has almost disappeared due to the impact of epidemic. We are all very anxious. We all think that it is important to restore tourism in the village and want to put forth our own strength and efforts.”(A15)
4.3. Activeness of Rural Talents
“The occurrence of the epidemic has stopped the national tourism development, including our village. In the round-table meetings, I proposed that we could consider the future development of tourism from the perspective of health, and many people agreed with me.”(A15)
“I used to be the founder of several enterprises. I heard that the development of tourism in my hometown had stagnated after the outbreak of the epidemic. With my feelings for my hometown, I went back to the village to join in tourism restoration. We discussed and planned how to better develop rural tourism under the circumstances of the epidemic.”(A7)
4.4. Innovativeness of Development Mechanisms
“We created a social governance form of “party building & micro grid”. This approach is an innovative way to bring villagers’ management from offline to online in the situation of COVID-19.”(A2)
“Through COVID-19, we realized that the market of health tourism and research tourism can be tapped, because the epidemic has made more people pay more attention to their own health, so we have also done the construction of traditional Chinese medicine health care center and research base.”(A1)
4.5. Persistence of Resilience Cultivation
“We went to Changsha to learn a live course for eight days and seven nights, teaching us the changes of tourist market after the epidemic, how to sell agricultural products in response to customer demand, and how to attract customers to our resorts via online media.”(A10)
“After learning these live streaming courses, we have an idea to broadcast the state of tourists when they visit scenic spots, so as to dispel some people’s fear of going out after the outbreak of the epidemic, so as to attract more tourists.”(A6)
5. Discussion
5.1. Theoretical Contributions to the Coopetition Literature
5.2. Practical Contributions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Gender | Age | Organization and Position |
---|---|---|---|
A1 | Male | 46 | Village committee staff |
A2 | Male | 43 | Municipal staff |
A3 | Female | 35 | Rural homestay operator |
A4 | Female | 28 | Scenic zone staff |
A5 | Male | 37 | Villager |
A6 | Female | 51 | Hospitality operator |
A7 | Male | 48 | Villager |
A8 | Male | 46 | Travel Company manager |
A9 | Female | 31 | Travel Company manager |
A10 | Female | 43 | Hospitality operator |
A11 | Female | 56 | Villager |
A12 | Male | 37 | Scenic zone staff |
A13 | Female | 26 | Scenic zone staff |
A14 | Female | 62 | Villager |
A15 | Female | 29 | Villager |
Concept | Corresponding Category | Sub-Category | Main Category |
---|---|---|---|
Financial support for the key national tourism village | Government support for rural tourism | Financial support from local government | Governance capability of local government |
Investment in infrastructure | |||
Fund for rural homestay renovation | |||
Grant land use right | Overall planning of government | Institutional support of local government | |
Project examination and approval | |||
Information, interest and emotional links among villagers | Close relationships between villagers | Good social relationships between villagers | Robustness of rural social networks |
Leading townsmen back home to build hometown | Rural labor force return | Sense of belonging in rural communities | |
Cleaning up illegal buildings voluntarily by villagers | Infrastructure construction by villagers for free | ||
Cleaning trails voluntarily by villagers | |||
Pioneering work in upgrading rural homestay facilities | Village elites’ pioneering work | Rural elites’ pioneering and demonstration | Activeness of rural talents |
Business elites’ leading to return home and develop tourism | Elites’ return and demonstration | ||
Hold round-table meetings of young talent | Enhancing communication and inspiration among young talent | Sustainable talent cultivation | |
Dedication, dreams, and financial foundation | Building a prospective talent team | ||
On-the-job training for professionals | |||
Party building and micro-grid | Party building and governance informatization | Innovative party building and governance model | Innovativeness of development mechanisms |
Tourism and education | Development of new rural tourism models | Innovative tourism development model | |
Tourism and health | |||
Tourism and culture | |||
Discount for tourists | Stimulating and releasing the vitality of tourism consumption | ||
Orchid village | Environmental protection | Ecological and environmental protection and improvement | Persistence of resilience cultivation |
Picking up garbage and building beautiful Tianxi (no littering; reducing/reusing/recycling program) | |||
Sending stone frogs back to nature | Living resources conservation | Conservation of biological diversity | |
Taking live courses/training on a regular basis | Developing promising professional farmers | Improving employment skills of the labor force |
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Wang, J.; Wang, Y.; He, Y.; Zhu, Z. Exploring the Factors of Rural Tourism Recovery in the Post-COVID-19 Era Based on the Grounded Theory: A Case Study of Tianxi Village in Hunan Province, China. Sustainability 2022, 14, 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095215
Wang J, Wang Y, He Y, Zhu Z. Exploring the Factors of Rural Tourism Recovery in the Post-COVID-19 Era Based on the Grounded Theory: A Case Study of Tianxi Village in Hunan Province, China. Sustainability. 2022; 14(9):5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095215
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Jing, Yi Wang, Yinchun He, and Zhangxiang Zhu. 2022. "Exploring the Factors of Rural Tourism Recovery in the Post-COVID-19 Era Based on the Grounded Theory: A Case Study of Tianxi Village in Hunan Province, China" Sustainability 14, no. 9: 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095215
APA StyleWang, J., Wang, Y., He, Y., & Zhu, Z. (2022). Exploring the Factors of Rural Tourism Recovery in the Post-COVID-19 Era Based on the Grounded Theory: A Case Study of Tianxi Village in Hunan Province, China. Sustainability, 14(9), 5215. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095215