Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1012291 Tourism Management 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper presents an inductive analysis of the meanings and dynamics of immigrants' travel to their places of origin from the perspective of social capital and acculturation. The narratives from in-depth interviews with 20 informants with different backgrounds vividly portray the dynamic and subjective life experience of the Mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong. The results thematically (re)presents their experience in terms of the “horizontal and vertical changes in social capital and its effects on travel decisions and acculturation, its influence on travel decisions, the effects of social capital on acculturation, and the influence of constraints on immigrants' travel.” Quintessentially, the inductive analysis sheds light on the meanings and dynamics of the immigrants' travel to their home places. For future studies, observations from this interpretive approach could be augmented by empirical testing and measurement of the interrelationships among social capital, acculturation, constraints, and travel decisions pertinent to Mainland Chinese immigrants traveling from Hong Kong to their places of origins.

► This study explores the meaning and dynamics of immigrants' travel to their home place of origins. ► The topic was investigated from a social capital and acculturation perspective. ► Interviews with twenty immigrants were conducted. ► The influencing factors of immigrants' travel decisions were identified.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Strategy and Management
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