Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.

Rural tourism is becoming increasingly important to the Malaysian economy and tourism product offering. Rural tourism enables tourists to reunite with nature and the culture of the destinations, and that it contributes to the economic and social recovery of the rural areas, as well as to the conserv...

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Main Authors: Abang Azlan, Mohamad, Alvin Yeo, W., Songan, Peter, Lo, May Chiun
Format: Proceeding
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/1/%5B2011%5D%5BeBKF3%5D%20Dimensionality%20of%20Communities%20Belief%20Attitude%20toward%20Rural%20Tourism%20Development.pdf
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author Abang Azlan, Mohamad
Alvin Yeo, W.
Songan, Peter
Lo, May Chiun
author_facet Abang Azlan, Mohamad
Alvin Yeo, W.
Songan, Peter
Lo, May Chiun
author_sort Abang Azlan, Mohamad
building UNIMAS Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Rural tourism is becoming increasingly important to the Malaysian economy and tourism product offering. Rural tourism enables tourists to reunite with nature and the culture of the destinations, and that it contributes to the economic and social recovery of the rural areas, as well as to the conservation of the environment and the spreading of local cultures. Nonetheless, development projects are often designed and implemented in which indigenous people have minimal voice in policy and management of it. Tourism which simply transplants urban investment and enterprises to a rural setting does little to improve communities' incomes. As a result, many indigenous people rightly feel that tourism industry has a poor track record, in disregarding their legitimate interests and rights, and profiting from their cultural knowledge and heritage. The present study in the paper involved looking at validating the dimensionality of the four tourism impact namely, economics, environment, social and cultural impact as perceived by local communities. Data was gathered through a survey using a structured questionnaire and administered to the community members residing at Bario. A series of tests such as factor analysis, correlation, and reliability analysis was conducted to confirm that the instrument is valid (content, construct, convergent, discriminant and nomological) as well as reliable. Implications regarding the value of conducting validity and reliability test for practitioners and researchers are discussed.
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spelling unimas-87612023-03-24T03:00:12Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/ Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario. Abang Azlan, Mohamad Alvin Yeo, W. Songan, Peter Lo, May Chiun H Social Sciences (General) Rural tourism is becoming increasingly important to the Malaysian economy and tourism product offering. Rural tourism enables tourists to reunite with nature and the culture of the destinations, and that it contributes to the economic and social recovery of the rural areas, as well as to the conservation of the environment and the spreading of local cultures. Nonetheless, development projects are often designed and implemented in which indigenous people have minimal voice in policy and management of it. Tourism which simply transplants urban investment and enterprises to a rural setting does little to improve communities' incomes. As a result, many indigenous people rightly feel that tourism industry has a poor track record, in disregarding their legitimate interests and rights, and profiting from their cultural knowledge and heritage. The present study in the paper involved looking at validating the dimensionality of the four tourism impact namely, economics, environment, social and cultural impact as perceived by local communities. Data was gathered through a survey using a structured questionnaire and administered to the community members residing at Bario. A series of tests such as factor analysis, correlation, and reliability analysis was conducted to confirm that the instrument is valid (content, construct, convergent, discriminant and nomological) as well as reliable. Implications regarding the value of conducting validity and reliability test for practitioners and researchers are discussed. 2011 Proceeding PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/1/%5B2011%5D%5BeBKF3%5D%20Dimensionality%20of%20Communities%20Belief%20Attitude%20toward%20Rural%20Tourism%20Development.pdf Abang Azlan, Mohamad and Alvin Yeo, W. and Songan, Peter and Lo, May Chiun (2011) Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario. In: Third eBario Knowledge Fair 2011, 16-18 November 2011.
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Abang Azlan, Mohamad
Alvin Yeo, W.
Songan, Peter
Lo, May Chiun
Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title_full Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title_fullStr Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title_full_unstemmed Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title_short Dimen­sion­al­ity of Com­mu­ni­ties’ Belief Atti­tude toward Tourism Devel­op­ment: The Case of Bario.
title_sort dimen­sion­al­ity of com­mu­ni­ties’ belief atti­tude toward tourism devel­op­ment: the case of bario.
topic H Social Sciences (General)
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8761/1/%5B2011%5D%5BeBKF3%5D%20Dimensionality%20of%20Communities%20Belief%20Attitude%20toward%20Rural%20Tourism%20Development.pdf