Rice William L, Rushing Jaclyn R, Thomsen Jennifer M, Whitney Peter
Parks, Tourism, and Recreation Management Program, University of Montana, Missoula, MT.
Department of Society and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT.
J Park Recreat Admi. 2022 Oct 24;40(4):45-65. doi: 10.18666/jpra-2022-11392. Epub 2022 Mar 18.
Campsites represent highly sought after recreational amenities in the national parks of the United States. Equitable allocation of scarce recreational resources has long been a key management issue in U.S. national parks, but has become increasingly difficult in an era of increasing demand. At present, a growing number of national park campsites are allocated through an online reservation system well in advance of a camper's arrival at a park. Compounding the challenge of allocating these campsites is a long history of exclusivity within national park camping-institutionalized through campground design and predicated on a legacy of the leisure class's affinity for camping in national parks. Given national park camping's history of exclusivity, this exploratory study seeks to explore how online reservation systems may impact the demographics of national park campers. Using mobile device location data, estimated demographics were calculated for campers in five national park campgrounds in the U.S. that each contained some sites requiring reservations and some sites available on a first-come, first-served basis. We detail results from analyses of variance between campsites requiring reservations and those that are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Results suggest that for each of the five campgrounds, those campers camping in sites that require reservations came from areas with higher median household incomes, on average. In three of the five campgrounds, this difference was significant. Additionally, in an urban-proximate setting, those camping in sites requiring reservations came from areas with a higher portion of White residency than those campers in campsites not requiring reservations, on average. We conclude with discussion that includes management implications concerning the growing prominence of online reservation systems for outdoor recreation amenities, and a brief research agenda for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) as they relate to campgrounds. Principally, the former group of implications includes the realization that online reservation systems present the unintended consequence of excluding low-income, and perhaps non-White, would-be campers-a conclusion drawn from the results of this exploratory study. This discussion includes an analysis of the distributive justice of online reservation systems.
露营地是美国国家公园中备受追捧的休闲设施。长期以来,公平分配稀缺的休闲资源一直是美国国家公园管理的关键问题,但在需求不断增加的时代,这一问题变得越来越棘手。目前,越来越多的国家公园露营地通过在线预订系统在露营者到达公园之前很久就进行分配。分配这些露营地的挑战还因国家公园露营长期以来的排他性而更加复杂——这种排他性通过营地设计制度化,并基于休闲阶层对在国家公园露营的喜爱传统。鉴于国家公园露营的排他性历史,这项探索性研究旨在探讨在线预订系统可能如何影响国家公园露营者的人口统计学特征。利用移动设备位置数据,计算了美国五个国家公园露营地露营者的估计人口统计学特征,每个露营地都有一些需要预订的场地和一些先到先得的场地。我们详细阐述了对需要预订的露营地和先到先得的露营地之间方差分析的结果。结果表明,对于这五个露营地中的每一个,平均而言,在需要预订的场地露营的露营者来自家庭收入中位数较高的地区。在五个露营地中的三个,这种差异是显著的。此外,在靠近城市的环境中,平均而言,在需要预订的场地露营的人比在不需要预订的场地露营的人来自白人居住比例更高的地区。我们在讨论中得出结论,包括关于户外休闲设施在线预订系统日益突出的管理意义,以及与露营地相关的多样性、公平性和包容性(DEI)的简要研究议程。主要而言,前一组影响包括认识到在线预订系统产生了排除低收入、可能还有非白人潜在露营者的意外后果——这是从这项探索性研究的结果中得出的结论。该讨论包括对在线预订系统分配正义的分析。