Tourism global production networks and uneven social upgrading in Kenya and Uganda |
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Authors: | Michelle Christian |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, USA |
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Abstract: | This paper addresses how the growth of tourism global production networks (GPNs) based in Kenya and Uganda created uneven social upgrading outcomes for workers and communities. A tourism GPN and social upgrading framework follows a global political economy approach to analyzing tourism development and labor in diverse tourism geographies. Two tourism GPNs are investigated: Mombasa, Kenya, and Murchison Falls National Park, Uganda. Four main findings emerge: (1) governance relationships between tour operator and accommodation firms directly impacted social upgrading outcomes for hotel workers and indirectly for excursion workers; (2) excursion workers and community members had precarious connections to tourism GPNs; (3) public governance and collective power were key components to social upgrading while supporting its unevenness; and (4) societal embeddedness constructions around gender and regional space influenced worker and community social upgrading potential. Social upgrading is shaped by a confluence of firm, institution, geography, and labor conditions that differentially materializes in specific tourism GPN arrangements. |
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Keywords: | Tourism global production networks social upgrading labor Mombasa, Kenya Murchison Falls National Park, Uganda, governance |
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