Institutional Repository

Assessing the implementation of the Robford conservation community benefit centre model

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor Mearns, K.
dc.contributor.author Hicks, Robert William
dc.date.accessioned 2011-02-25T09:21:54Z
dc.date.available 2011-02-25T09:21:54Z
dc.date.issued 2010-03
dc.identifier.citation Hicks, Robert William (2010) Assessing the implementation of the Robford conservation community benefit centre model, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4054> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4054
dc.description.abstract Ecotourism has often failed to deliver appropriate, tangible benefits to host communities living near protected areas in developing regions of Africa. The Robford Community Conservation Benefit Centre (RCCBC) model was developed as a means to overcome many of the common problems of community-based ecotourism and to enhance the range and flow of benefits to such communities by developing a suite of products and programmes aimed specifically at scientists, volunteer tourists and participatory environmental research tourists. This study tests the aims that the necessary tourism, geographic, social and research conditions are present for the implementation of the RCCBC model in a local community situated close to the Great Fish River Nature Reserve (GFRNR) in South Africa. Situational assessment fieldtrips determined that the GFRNR, its immediate tourism egion and the ten settlements surrounding the nature reserve conformed to RCCBC development guidelines and were suitable for further detailed investigation. One of the settlements, Glenmore Village, conformed most closely to the RCCBC model’s guidelines for selecting a preferred host community. A census survey of all households in Glenmore determined a demographic profile of village residents. A random sample survey of 70 Glenmore households established a social profile of the community’s residents and their attitude to various aspects of the RCCBC model. A spatial analysis of the Glenmore precinct determined that sufficient, suitable land was available for the development of RCCBC products and programmes. The findings of the research indicated that the tourism, geographic, social and research conditions were present at Glenmore, the GFRNR and its surrounding tourism region for the implementation of the RCCBC model and the development of the model’s proposed products and programmes at Glenmore Village. Implementation of the RCCBC model at Glenmore and the GFRNR as a pilot study could introduce a new way of bringing tangible, meaningful benefits to select communities located close to protected areas in existing tourism regions that have failed to benefit either completely or partially from traditional forms of ecotourism development in the past. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvii, 275 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Community-based tourism en
dc.subject Community conservation en
dc.subject Robford Tourism en
dc.subject Participatory Environmental Research Tourism (PERT) en
dc.subject Benefit centre model
dc.subject Volunteer tourism
dc.subject Great Fish River Nature Reserve
dc.subject Glenmore
dc.subject Tourism related spatial assessment
dc.subject Tourism related spatial assessment
dc.subject Robford Conservation Community Benefit Centre Model
dc.subject.ddc 338.4791
dc.subject.lcsh Robford Community Conservation Benefit Centre model
dc.subject.lcsh Participatory Environmental Research Tourism
dc.subject.lcsh Community-based conservation
dc.subject.lcsh Ecotourism
dc.title Assessing the implementation of the Robford conservation community benefit centre model en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Environmental Sciences
dc.description.degree M. Sc. (Environmental Management)


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics