Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2904662685> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2904662685 endingPage "66" @default.
- W2904662685 startingPage "43" @default.
- W2904662685 abstract "Residents of high amenity rural areas in the U.S. are grappling with the community-level impacts of their small towns increasingly becoming destinations for in-migrants, seasonal residents, and tourists. This case study of an emerging destination uses alterity theory to examine how amenity migration affects residents’ community making and subsequently their community development efforts. Residents tend to see their community as divided into two social groups based upon opposed stances towards development; one resistant to any form of change and the other open. The ‘Keepers’ are seen as stuck in their ways and closed to any form of development while the ‘Changers’ are perceived as trying to change too much and turn the community into a more established amenity destination—like Aspen—through various local development projects. In-depth interviews with residents and observations in one amenity destination show how two groups exist and differ along key social and demographic dimensions, but how residents’ interests in community development are more intertwined than they assume. The negative perceptions that residents have of each other, however, have real consequences for the town because it fosters misunderstandings, prevents cooperation, and inhibits the building of social capital which prevents integrated community development efforts. Specifically, it creates the reality and perception that various development projects do not have everyone’s support or input and it has prevented some efforts from occurring at all. This research provides rural sociologists and community developers with a more nuanced understanding of how the growing trend of amenity migration can shape residents’ daily interactions as well as overarching community development efforts.Keywords: amenity migration, community making, rural community development------------------------------------------------------------------Titre: Nous n'avons pas emmenage ici pour demenager a Aspen: la construction et le developpement communautaire a des fins d'emergence de commodite rurale ResumeLes residents de grands espaces de commodites rurales aux Etats-Unis sont aux prises avec les impacts au niveau communautaire de leurs petites villes qui deviennent de plus en plus des destinations pour les immigrants, les residents saisonniers et les touristes. Cette etude de cas d'une destination emergente utilise la theorie de l'alterite pour examiner comment la migration de l'alterite affecte la communaute des residents dans la creation et ulterieurement dans leur effort de developpement communautaire. Les residents ont tendance a voir leur communaute divisee en deux groupes sociaux bases sur des positions opposees face au developpement; un resistant etant oppose a n'importe quelle forme de changement tandis que l'autre etant ouvert. Les 'Gardiens' sont vus comme attaches a leurs habitudes et opposes a n'importe quelle forme de developpement tandis que les 'Partisans du Changement' sont percus comme essayant de trop changer et de retourner la communaute en une destination de commodites mieux etablie—comme Aspen—a travers de nombreux projets de developpement locaux. Des entrevues approfondies avec des residents et des observations dans une destination de commodites montrent dans quelle mesure deux groupes existent et different a l'interieur de dimensions sociales cles et demographiques, mais comment les interets des residents dans un developpement communautaire sont plus entrelaces qu'ils ne l'assument. Toutefois, les perceptions negatives que les residents se temoignent, ont de reelles consequences sur la ville car cela augmente les mesinterpretations, empeche la cooperation et bloque la construction du capital social ce qui empeche les efforts de developpement integre communautaire. En particulier, cela cree la realite et la perception que de nombreux projets de developpement n'ont pas le support de tout le monde ou leur contribution et cela a empeche ces efforts d'aboutir. Cette etude fournit aux sociologistes ruraux et aux promoteurs ruraux une comprehension plus nuancee de la maniere dont la tendance a la croissance de la migration des commodites peut modifier les interactions quotidiennes des residents ainsi que les efforts generaux de developpement communautaire." @default.
- W2904662685 created "2018-12-22" @default.
- W2904662685 creator A5055373575 @default.
- W2904662685 date "2018-12-18" @default.
- W2904662685 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2904662685 title "“We Didn’t Move Here to Move to Aspen”: Community Making and Community Development in an Emerging Rural Amenity Destination" @default.
- W2904662685 cites W106493318 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1454668121 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1480877497 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1505507160 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1511413730 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1514614051 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1527587547 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1557599502 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1562008401 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1564565182 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1574339773 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1587630586 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1596243037 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1805046367 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W191001578 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1966050891 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W1994013173 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2000117884 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2003085329 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2006764849 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2007386193 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2026868584 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2027090989 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2028024914 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2031443567 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2035644960 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2037873216 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2049391810 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2049725063 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2061066529 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2070494986 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2087850663 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2095061237 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2095887806 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2101516907 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2121437843 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2121627962 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2124315738 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2127589096 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2131883651 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2135773378 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2136265349 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2143018657 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2151082539 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2160359447 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2172003276 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2325256301 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2325264747 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2565948811 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2594267456 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2611954620 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2622116781 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2737327811 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2754753823 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W2784023682 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W3130383601 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W605504879 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W606735773 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W619318923 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W623189497 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W628585155 @default.
- W2904662685 cites W633266517 @default.
- W2904662685 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2904662685 type Work @default.
- W2904662685 sameAs 2904662685 @default.
- W2904662685 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2904662685 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2904662685 hasAuthorship W2904662685A5055373575 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C18918823 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C26271046 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C26760741 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C2776687071 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C2778362435 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C2779942219 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C36289849 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C50522688 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C68062652 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConcept C71343576 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C144024400 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C15744967 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C162324750 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C166957645 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C169760540 @default.
- W2904662685 hasConceptScore W2904662685C17744445 @default.