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Is the hospitality and tourism curriculum effective in teaching personal social responsibility?

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by R McKercher, M Mackenzie, Bruce PrideauxBruce Prideaux, S Pang
This study assesses how well hospitality and tourism programs instill a sense of personal social responsibility among their students. Climate change is used as a representative example of a global environmental issue to measure attitudes of students who have taken subjects such as ethics, sustainability, social responsibility, impacts, sustainable planning, and environmental studies with students who have not taken subjects of this nature. The article compares the views of a sample of 2,436 students in 21 economies. The results reveal that the student cohort that took subjects on ethics, sustainability, and social responsibility were no more likely to express stronger environmental attitudes or change their environmental behaviors than the cohort that had not taken subjects of this nature. Surprisingly, counterintuitive results were revealed, whereby students who had taken subjects that incorporated aspects of personal social responsibility exhibited no greater tendency to accept personal responsibility. Instead, both groups were equally likely to transfer blame to an ethereal “other.” The study concludes by suggesting that a major rethink of sustainability and social consciousness raising subjects is required.

History

Issue

431-462

Start Page

431

End Page

462

Number of Pages

32

eISSN

1557-7554

ISSN

1096-3480

Location

United Kingdom

Publisher

Sage Publications

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Asia University; Hong Kong Polytechnic University; James Cook University; TBA Research Institute;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of hospitality and tourism research.

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