What is it about?
Resident-tourist interaction can be injurious to tourists’ stay experience and wellbeing. Harmful behaviors towards tourists often stem from implicit biases. This paper reports how mindfulness benefits other-oriented interpersonal character strengths (self-transcendence in our study), thereby reducing tourist stereotypes while expanding residents’ hospitality.
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Why is it important?
Understanding residents' psychological processes that benefit tourists interests is critical to designing workable interventions in service of tourism development. Our finding that resident mindfulness promotes harmonious host-tourist interaction is key to the path towards tourism sustainability.
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This page is a summary of: Expanding self, breaking stereotypes, and building hospitality: resident mindfulness’ role in host-tourist interaction, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, May 2024, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2024.2357373.
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