Worked solution
### Introduction
- **Definitions**: Define key concepts including *sustainable tourism* (tourism that meets the needs of present tourists and host regions while protecting and enhancing opportunities for the future), *fragile environments* (ecosystems easily disrupted by human activity, e.g., coral reefs, alpine regions, semi-arid areas), and *stakeholder conflicts* (divergent goals between profit-driven commercial developers and resource-dependent or culturally protective local communities).
- **Thesis**: While sustainable tourism management strategies—such as Community-Based Tourism (CBT), carrying-capacity regulations, and zoning—offer viable pathways to mitigate tensions, their success is highly variable. True resolution of conflict is often hindered by power asymmetries, economic leakages, and weak local governance.
### Body Paragraph 1: Environmental Zoning and Carrying Capacity
- **Strategy**: Implementing strict limits on visitor numbers (carrying capacity) and spatial zoning (e.g., restricted-access core zones in national parks).
- **Analysis of Success**: Protects fragile ecosystems from degradation (e.g., the Galapagos Islands or Bhutan's high-value, low-volume model), which preserves the natural assets local communities rely on for subsistence or local guiding.
- **Limitations/Conflict**: Commercial developers may lobby against these limits as they cap profit margins. Conversely, zoning can displace indigenous or local populations from traditional hunting/fishing grounds, creating new conflicts with conservation authorities and developers.
### Body Paragraph 2: Community-Based Tourism (CBT)
- **Strategy**: Direct ownership or management of tourism assets by local communities (e.g., community-run ecolodges in the Amazon Basin or trekking homestays in Nepal).
- **Analysis of Success**: CBT ensures that economic benefits remain within the local economy (reducing economic leakage), empowers local decision-making, and minimizes cultural commodification.
- **Limitations/Conflict**: CBT projects often struggle with limited capital, lack of marketing expertise, and internal elite capture (where benefits are unequally distributed within the community). Commercial developers with superior infrastructure and marketing can easily outcompete CBTs, leading to resentment and structural inequality.
### Body Paragraph 3: Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Public-Private Partnerships
- **Strategy**: Commercial developers partner with governments and local communities, committing to eco-friendly resort designs, local hiring quotas, and funding community infrastructure (e.g., luxury eco-resorts in Costa Rica or Fiji).
- **Analysis of Success**: Creates high-quality employment, improves local infrastructure (roads, water, medical facilities), and provides developers with a social license to operate.
- **Limitations/Conflict**: Often criticized as "greenwashing." The most lucrative management roles are frequently given to expatriates, while locals are relegated to low-wage service jobs. Furthermore, repatriation of profits (leakage) to foreign corporate headquarters leaves locals feeling exploited, maintaining underlying tensions.
### Conclusion
- **Synthesis**: Sustainable tourism strategies are not a panacea. While they successfully reduce ecological damage and provide targeted economic benefits, they rarely eliminate the fundamental structural conflicts between global capital accumulation (developers) and local self-determination.
- **Final Judgement**: The success of these strategies depends heavily on strong national and local governance that actively enforces regulations, empowers local voices in spatial planning, and ensures equitable distribution of revenue.
Marking scheme
### Detailed 16-Mark Essay Rubric
**AO1: Knowledge and Understanding (4 Marks)**
- **4 marks**: Demonstrates detailed, accurate, and wide-ranging knowledge of sustainable tourism strategies (e.g., CBT, carrying capacity, zoning) and the nature of conflicts in fragile environments.
- **3 marks**: Demonstrates good knowledge of sustainable tourism and stakeholder conflicts, but may lack depth in explaining fragile environments specifically.
- **2-1 marks**: Basic or superficial knowledge of tourism or sustainability. Limited understanding of stakeholder conflicts.
**AO2: Application and Analysis (4 Marks)**
- **4 marks**: Offers a highly analytical discussion of the extent to which strategies resolve conflicts. Explores both sides of the argument (successes vs. limitations) with high-level geographical reasoning.
- **3 marks**: Analyzes the effectiveness of strategies, but may focus heavily on description rather than critical evaluation of the *conflict resolution* aspect.
- **2-1 marks**: Descriptive response with little to no analytical evaluation of the success/failure of the strategies.
**AO3: Synthesis and Evaluation (4 Marks)**
- **4 marks**: Formulates a well-structured, coherent, and balanced argument leading to a reasoned, reflective synthesis/conclusion that directly answers "to what extent."
- **3 marks**: Structured argument with an attempt at evaluation, though the conclusion may be somewhat generalized or lacks deep synthesis of conflicting perspectives.
- **2-1 marks**: Lacks structure; arguments are disconnected, and the conclusion is missing or merely repeats points.
**AO4: Use of Case Studies and Examples (4 Marks)**
- **4 marks**: Integrates specific, well-chosen, and detailed real-world case studies (e.g., Galapagos, Costa Rica, Nepal, Machu Picchu, or local equivalent) to support key arguments.
- **3 marks**: Uses appropriate geographical examples, but they lack specific detail or are used sporadically.
- **2-1 marks**: Extremely generalized examples or none at all.