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Featured researches published by Marianna Strzelecka.


Protected Area Management, 2012, Rijeka: InTech, pp.183-202. | 2012

Effectiveness of Nature Conservation - A Case of Natura 2000 Sites in Poland

Małgorzata Grodzińska-Jurczak; Marianna Strzelecka; Sristi Kamal; Justyna Gutowska

This book chapter examines problems emerging due to the designation of protected areas as well as implementation and management of the Natura 2000 in Poland.


Journal of Sustainable Tourism | 2017

Empowerment and resident support for tourism in rural Central and Eastern Europe (CEE): the case of Pomerania, Poland

Marianna Strzelecka; B. Bynum Boley; Celina Strzelecka

ABSTRACT Despite empowerment being a crucial component of sustainable tourism, few scholars have quantitatively operationalized empowerment and looked at how it applies to rural societies within the post-communist European Union (EU) member states. Knowing the high priority of sustainable rural development goals within the EU, empowering residents within these post-communist societies has become a pertinent issue especially where those societies appear more reluctant to engaging in democratic ways of decision-making. In response to this gap, this study tests the cross-cultural validity of the Resident Empowerment through Tourism Scale, and then evaluates how empowerment predicts residents’ support for tourism within the municipality of Choczewo, Pomerania, Poland. Using a theoretical perspective that blends Social Exchange Theory with Webers Theory of Formal and Substantive Rationality, these non-economic empowerment dimensions are coupled with a measure of resident perceptions of economically benefiting from tourism to see if rural residents in Choczewo, Poland, are more swayed by the economic or non-economic benefits of tourism. Results show that residents within this Central and Eastern Europe setting are more influenced by the pride and self-esteem boost associated with psychological empowerment and the perceptions of increased community cohesion (i.e. social empowerment) than the economic promises of tourism.


Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research | 2018

The Role of Place Attachment in Developing Emotional Solidarity With Residents

Kyle M. Woosnam; Kayode D. Aleshinloye; Marianna Strzelecka; Emrullah Erul

As the body of work concerning emotional solidarity between residents and tourists continues to grow within the tourism literature, little focus has been placed on how the setting factors into such relationships. Using the Osun Osogbo Sacred Grove (a UNESCO World Heritage Site in southwestern Nigeria) as a study site, this research examines the role visitors’ attachment to the place plays in explaining their perceived solidarity with area residents. From confirmatory factor analysis, a measurement model was established, which revealed strong psychometric properties for the two place attachment factors (i.e., place identity and place dependence) and the three emotional solidarity factors (i.e., feeling welcomed, emotional closeness, and sympathetic understanding). Structural equation modeling demonstrated that each of the place attachment factors explained a high degree of variance (e.g., R2 ranging between 45% and 54%) in visitors’ emotional solidarity with residents. Implications and future research opportunities are offered within the close of the article.


Tourism Review | 2018

Is tourism conducive to residents’ social trust? Evidence form large-scale social surveys

Marianna Strzelecka; Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn

Purposes This paper aims to understand the character of the relationship between tourism growth and residents’ social trust. Design/methodology/approach The study uses large-scale data to model the effect of tourism on generalized trust attitudes Among advantages to analyzing data from large-scale social surveys, extensive content and representative coverage of the population are probably the most appealing. The broad coverage of the population of the large-scale social surveys allows for a broader generalization of the study results as well as comparison of areas with very different tourist activity. Findings This study offers two key findings. First, the effect of tourist arrivals (as per capita) on social trust attitudes is stronger in poorer regions than in wealthier regions. Second, only domestic tourism positively affects trust. Research limitations/implications This study delivered a straightforward analysis of large data to be able to generalize findings and make a significant theoretical contribution to tourism discipline. This goal was pursued at the expense of complex or in-depth explanation of the observed phenomenon. Practical implications Findings from this study indicate that there are at least two crucial criteria for tourism to be able to strengthen residents’ social trust. First, domestic tourism should be encouraged in destination regions in their early development stages and in more homogeneous regions. Perhaps, focus on domestic tourists before internationalization of a tourism product is the most effective way to promote tourism development that is supported by local residents. Second, tourism is likely to have stronger positive effect on social trust in poorer regions. Thus, tourism policy makers should take into consideration the actual economic need for tourism. Residents in wealthier regions may show less support for tourism simply because they don’t need it and they have no economic incentives to be involved. In fact, tourism in wealthier regions is likely to diminish residents’ social trust, and thus it disrupts local social and political processes that rely on high social trust. Originality/value Social trust is considered an important measure of social cohesion and it enables modern societies to thrive. Social trust has not been problematized in the context of contemporary tourism growth. This is the first study that uses large data social survey to model the effect of tourism on social trust in European destination regions.


Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research | 2018

Resident Perceptions of the Economic Benefits of Tourism: Toward a Common Measure

B. Bynum Boley; Marianna Strzelecka; Kyle M. Woosnam

At the core of the resident attitude literature is the general understanding that the more residents economically benefit from tourism, the more they support tourism. While a central tenet, previous research has measured resident perceptions of economically benefiting from tourism somewhat haphazardly, using four disparate directions without a common cross-culturally reliable and valid scale. To bring clarity to the literature, this study develops and presents the Economic Benefit from Tourism Scale as a reliable and valid measure for the resident attitude literature to embrace. The scale’s development follows Churchill’s recommendations and uses three separate data collections across the United States of America and Poland to purify the scale and demonstrate its validity within an international context. Both samples prove the scale to be construct valid with maximum weight alphas in the .85 to .90 range, standard factor loadings all above 0.60, and average variance extracted estimates between 57% and 69%.


Tourism Geographies | 2017

Using PP GIS interviews to understand residents’ perspective of European ecological network Natura 2000

Marianna Strzelecka; Marcin Rechciński; Małgorzata Grodzińska-Jurczak

ABSTRACT Sustainable nature-based tourism was brought to the publics attention as a solution to the problem of economic diversification in Central and Eastern European (CEE) communities included in European Ecological Network – N2000. However, Natura 2000 tourism development has not yet proven to be an effective way to boost local economies and the notion of sustainable tourism based on Natura 2000 resources has been challenged by residents of the CEE communities. The study goal was to explore issues concerning Natura 2000 tourism from the perspective of local residents within three municipalities of Małopolska in Poland to determine if Natura 2000 is perceived by local residents as a valuable tourism asset. We employed a mix-mode methodology: an in-depth interview and public participation GIS mapping task. The study results highlight several areas of concern regarding resident perspectives of Natura 2000-based tourism: first, the misconception that residents need and want nature-based tourism when other economic activities provide sufficient income; second, the misconception that Natura 2000 is considered a valuable asset when other tourism attractions in a municipality attract more visitors; third, the residents misconception of nature-based tourism itself; and last but not least the importance of engaging with residents when assessing the potential for Natura 2000 tourism. These findings can assist policy-makers and tourism managers with prioritizing avenues for further action.


Community Development | 2010

Engaging residents in planning for sustainable rural-nature tourism in post-communist Poland

Marianna Strzelecka; Bruce E. Wicks


Tourism planning and development | 2015

Community participation and empowerment in rural post-communist societies: lessons from the leader approach in Pomerania, Poland.

Marianna Strzelecka; Bruce E. Wicks


Annals of Tourism Research | 2017

Place attachment and empowerment: Do residents need to be attached to be empowered?

Marianna Strzelecka; B. Bynum Boley; Kyle M. Woosnam


Annals of Tourism Research | 2016

Towards a universal measure of “Support for Tourism”

B. Bynum Boley; Marianna Strzelecka

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