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1、外文出处:Tourism Management2009 Vol. 30 No. 6 pp. 878-889Convention industry and destination clusters: Evidence from Italy Author: Cristina BerniniNationality: ItalyAdapt from: Tourism management,2009,30(6)Abstract: The study investigates aspects of the convention industry not well explored in the liter
2、ature. Using a framework of cluster theory, a quantitative method is used to assess the Italian convention industry and its relationships with local infrastructure and tourism product supply. The development of the different phases of the life cycle of convention destinations in Italy is outlined an
3、d locational factors which influence them are investigated. Managerial and political strategies which would enhance the competitiveness of the Italian convention industry in the global market are proposed. Furthermore, the study evaluates the use of the cluster theory in investigating the hospitalit
4、y industry, contributing to the debate on local tourism development.Keywords: Convention Industry, Cluster Theory, Local Development, Clustern Analysis, Quantile Regression. Interest in geographical networks and their role in economic development has grown over the last few years because economies t
5、end to develop through the emergence of territorial agglomeration and company networks (Enright, 2001). An emerging industry centres on some natural resource, market need or local skill. As the industry develops, new firms, inputs and service enterprises are created. New economic sectors emerge thro
6、ugh spill-overs and transferred knowledge and global competitiveness increases. Territorial development and competitiveness are also very important for the tourism industry. Tourism is mainly constituted by SMEs, so functioning within a network may contribute to overcoming production, managerial and
7、 commercial difficulties. In order to increase competition and strategic positioning in the worldwide market, tourism destinations should encourage the emergence of tourism networks and the analysis of their structure. Over the past decade, several attempts have been made using the industrial distri
8、ct and cluster theories to investigate tourism networks and their role in local development.Industrial districts (Marshall,1966) are agglomerations of SMEs specialising in different parts of a given production activity. Although industrial district theory analyses conditions for the development of a
9、 local vertically-integrated network of firms operating in manufacturing markets, some authors have tried to adapt industrial district theory to the tourism industry (Gets, 1993; Hjalager, 2000; Pearce, 2001; Lazzeretti, 2003). Despite the use of industrial district theory to investigate tourism net
10、works, some doubts are cast on its applicability. Tourism is a sector with a fragmented structure typically based on SMEs but it is particularly characterised by the presence of a large number of participants in the network who are not necessarily involved in the same economic sectors. For this reas
11、on Cluster theory is possibly a better analytic model for the investigation of the tourism industry. Cluster theory has its origins in the studies of Porter (1998), who defines cluster as geographic concentrations of interconnected companies, specialised suppliers, service providers and firms in rel
12、ated industries and associated institutions in particular fields that compete but also cooperate. Although Porters work is manly focused on the manufacturing industry, it has also been extended and applied to service industries, such as tourism. Some differences emerge between the two theories. Indu
13、strial districts are usually local clusters of single-product industries. In contrast, cluster theory refers to concentrations of interrelated but different industries displaying a shared understanding of the competitive business ethic emanating from competitive theory (Jackson & Murphy, 2002). The
14、theory of industrial districts generally refers to an homogeneous product but this is not the case when dealing with tourism destinations. Porters cluster theory is better designed to accommodate a heterogeneous product in which the majority of cluster participants serve different industry segments.
15、 These points of difference make the analytical framework of industrial districts less applicable to tourism destinations than the cluster approach. In the last ten years several studies have used cluster theory to investigate the role of tourism in influencing local growth. In this field of researc
16、h the attention is mainly focused on the generalisation of the industrial model as an analytical framework for measuring the success of tourism destinations and on the role of tourism enterprise clusters for their innovation and contribution to community development (Go & Williams, 1993; Michael, 20
17、03; Van Den Berg, Braum, & Van Widen, 2001; Tinsley & Lynch, 2001; Jackson & Murphy, 2002, 2006; Nordin, 2003; Hall, 2004, 2005a, 2005b; Canina, Enz, & Harrison, 2005; Saxena, 2005; Jackson, 2006; Novelli, Smithz, & Spencer, 2006). Otherwise, as stressed by Michael (2003), the cluster theory is vali
18、d in macro-regional analysis but presents some drawbacks when applied to small regional environments. The author suggests expanding the concept of cluster to micro-cluster, the so-called diagonal cluster (diagonal integration in Poon, 1994),labelled in this way to refer to the concentration of compl
19、ementary (or symbiotic) firms, which each add value to the activities of other firms, even though their products may be quite distinct. In this sense, diagonal clustering brings together firms that supply separate products and services, effectively creating a bundle that will be consumed as though i
20、t was one item. For tourism and other service industries, this is often routine-for example, a tourism destination requires firms to supply the activity, provide transport, hospitality, accommodation, etc. The co-location of many complementary providers adds value to the tourism experience, and the
21、converse may also be true, in that the absence of key services restricts the development of other firms (Michael, 2003).In essence, a firm producing a complementary product or service is not a competitor, because its activities add more value to the product than the product alone. Thus, cooperation
22、creates alliances and networks, makes better use of skills and resources and encourages innovative business activities which improve local development. The diagonal cluster theoretical framework can also be useful as an interpretive model for the local development of convention destinations. It is a
23、 particularly interesting model to apply in the case of Italy because it supports the main guidelines defined by national tourism legislation. The national legislation reform on tourism defines the Tourism Local System (TLS) as homogeneous or integrated destinations, also concerning areas which belo
24、ng to different regions, characterised by an integrated supply of cultural and environmental goods and tourism entertainments, including typical agricultural products and local arts and crafts, or by a wide presence of single or cooperating tourism enterprises (Law nr. 135,2001). As the TLS definiti
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