Co-designing for Sustainable Community-based Tourism Enterprises in Homa Bay County, Kenya
Abstract
The advocacy for community participation in local development has been in
existence for a while now, with its roots in the concept of sustainability and sustainable
development. This emphasis on community participation for local development is fuelled
by presumed benefits that include its consideration as an avenue for encouraging
entrepreneurship and self-help amongst the local community which, leads to a reduction
in public sector expenditure and any development projects targeted at meeting needs,
therefore, cost effective. In the tourism sector, community participation is a way to
legitimizing tourism development, ensuring local resource management and
empowerment of local community through establishment of Community-based Tourism
Enterprises (CBTEs), all of which contribute to sustainable tourism development.
However, despite the above stated benefits, there is empirical evidence indicating that the
uptake for community participation has been relatively slow and levels of participation
considered low, hence the need to interrogate the nature and how to nurture community
participation for sustainable CBTEs.
The purpose of this study was to assess application of co-design as an approach
for effective community participation in CBTEs with particular interest to Homa Bay
County. The specific objectives wereto profile tourist products in Homa Bay county, to
identify the opportunities for co-design in CBTEs, to apply co-design tools and
techniques in CBTEs in Homa Bay County, and to propose an appropriate co-design
framework for sustainable CBTEs. The study adopted an exploratory research design
approach that allowed qualitative methods of data collection which provided in-depth
insight into the research questions, allowing for inductive reasoning from the tacit
knowledge of the respondents, who the researcher considered as experts of their domain.
The respondents included members of two case studies from Homa Bay County: RAMA
Cultural Centre and Ndhiwa Kodumba Tse Tse group. The key informants were drawn
from various institutions including the Ministry of Tourism, County Government of
Homa Bay, Kenya Wildlife Services, Nature Kenya and design experts from the
Department of Art and Design, University of Nairobi. The findings indicate that Homa
Bay county is rich in geographical, historical, mythical and cultural tourism products that
need to be maximally utilized. There was evidence of spontaneous and coercive types of
local community participation in tourism. Effective community participation in CBTEs
was hindered by operational, structural and cultural elements. Co-design tools, methods
and techniques were employed within the Appreciative Participatory Planning and Action
(APPA) framework for CBTEs and these proved to be effective in enhancing community
participation. The study concludes that although community participation is advocated as
an integral part of sustainable CBTE development and policy documents provide a robust
legal framework for participation, a major weakness is the lack of clear mechanisms for
community participation. This study therefore recommends the development of an
appropriate co-design framework to be used as a baseline for enhancing effective
community participation in sustainable CBTEs.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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