| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11005071 | Tourism Management | 2019 | 14 Pages | 
Abstract
												Community based tourism (CBT) offers many opportunities, however, conflict frequently occurs while developing CBT in communities around the world. Despite conflict limiting the potential of CBT, conflict management in CBT has not previously been systematically studied. To investigate conflict and conflict management during CBT, a linear model of conflict management was developed and subsequently tested through a three phase qualitative process: analysis of CBT literature, online international survey of 29 CBT stakeholders, and in-depth interviews of 23 CBT stakeholders. Results endorse the proposed linear model of 'conflict themes': an 'instance' of conflict, followed by a 'response', which results in an 'impact'. The rich data highlights the complexity involved, which was incorporated into the expanded model with three additional scenarios: 'new conflict develops', 'interrelated conflict themes', and 'simultaneous conflict themes'. The complete Conflict Management Model provides stakeholders with a tool to address conflict, thereby improving the outcomes of CBT.
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											Authors
												Marcus Curcija, Noreen Breakey, Sally Driml, 
											