- Title
- Investigating Thai accommodation managers’ environmental management practices: a behavioural intentions approach
- Creator
- Lertpatcharapong, Rungnapa
- Relation
- University of Newcastle Research Higher Degree Thesis
- Resource Type
- thesis
- Date
- 2014
- Description
- Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
- Description
- Tourism is one of the most important businesses in many countries. It has often led to environmental problems, particularly in developing countries (Alexander, 2002; Kasim, 2007). Environmental impacts from the tourism industry have become a serious issue in developing countries such as Thailand. This is particularly evident in the Thai hotel industry, which consumes a huge amount of natural resources and is a major contributor to such environmental impacts. Over the past two decades, the Thai hotel industry has begun to implement environmental management practices (EMP) in the form of ‘Green Leaf Certification’ (GLC) - an industry and government driven environmental certification program - as a way to address their environmental impacts. Despite the potential benefits from adopting environmental certification, environmental management practices and the GLC, they are still not popular in the Thai hotel industry, with only 203 out of 5,420 accommodation establishments (National Statistical Office, 2010) which are Green Leaf certified (Green Leaf Foundation, 2013b). This study recognises that hotel managers in Thailand may play a central role in increasing the uptake of GLC. The purpose of this thesis was to examine the behavioural intentions of the hotel managers in Thailand to adopt the GLC. Specifically, this study considers how the perceived benefits of adopting the GLC, in conjunction with social pressures, the barriers to adoption and general environmental attitudes influence the managers’ behavioural intentions. The Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) was used as the theoretical framework for this study. The data for this study was collected from a sample of hotels registered with the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) through an online survey distributed to 359 hotel managers. The survey investigated hotel managers’ knowledge, attitudes and behavioural intentions (over one or five years) towards the GLC and their general environmental attitudes. The findings of this thesis can be divided into two categories that relate to the periods of time in which the behavioural intentions were framed. Firstly, the factors that predict an increase in the hotel managers’ behavioural intention to adopt the GLC in the next year were their general environmental attitudes, selected subjective norms and economic barriers. Secondly, the predictors of intention to adopt the GLC in the next five years were external support barriers, knowledge of EMP barriers and the education level of the managers. The findings of this thesis sheds some light onto strategies for increasing the number of certified hotels in developing countries. For example, most of the hotels in Thailand are small and medium sized, and the culture tends to be collectivistic. In the short term, the Thai government and associated organisations should pay attention to lowering the cost required to become certified, increasing the knowledge of the general environmental attitudes and of the people influencing them. While in the long term, the government and associated organisations should support hotels by creating seminars on knowledge about GLC and environmental problems into the formal education level such as diploma and Bachelor’s degree. Moreover, this thesis focuses on the differences in the general environmental attitudes of hotel managers who knew about the GLC and those who did not. While both groups were more likely to be more eco-centric than anthropocentric, those who knew of the GLC tended to be less anthropocentric than those who did not know about it. These findings are discussed in the light of previous studies and the findings of the thesis. The implications for the environmental policies and practices of the hotel industry in Thailand are considered, and the thesis concludes by presenting recommendations for future research.
- Subject
- tourism industry; Thailand; environmental impacts; enironmental management practices
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1051069
- Identifier
- uon:15244
- Rights
- Copyright 2014 Rungnapa Lertpatcharapong
- Language
- eng
- Full Text
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