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Fijian culture and the environment: a focus on the ecological and social interconnectedness of tourism development

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 01:48 authored by Movono, A, Heidi DahlesHeidi Dahles, Becken, S
Understanding the complex and adaptive nature of Pacific Island communities is a growing yet relatively unexplored area in the context of tourism development. Taking an ethnographic research approach, this study examines how over 40 years of tourism development have led to complex and multi-scale changes within an Indigenous Fijian village. The study establishes that tourism development has brought a range of ecological shifts that have, over time, spurred far-reaching changes within the embedded sociocultural constructs of the community. The development of the Naviti Resort, a water catchment dam, a causeway and a man-made island have created substantial changes in totemic associations, livelihood approaches, and traditional knowledge structures within Vatuolalai village. The emergence of internal adaptive cycles, and new behaviours, practices and values that redefine the cultural landscape will be discussed. This paper demonstrates the interconnectivity of nature, society and culture within Indigenous communal systems and asserts that ecological changes introduced in one part of a community stimulate complex, non-linear responses in other elements of the socio-ecological system of a Fijian village.

History

Publication title

Journal of Sustainable Tourism

Volume

26

Pagination

451-469

ISSN

0966-9582

Department/School

School of Social Sciences

Publisher

Routledge

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Rights statement

© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Environmentally sustainable commercial services and tourism not elsewhere classified; Economic issues in tourism

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