Thursday, September 21, 2017

Sharing economy: unravelling disruption, innovation and transformations in travel and tourism

Journal of Travel Research
Special issue on
Sharing economy: unravelling disruption, innovation and transformations in travel and tourism

Guest editors
Professor Marianna Sigala
University of South Australia, Australia
&
Dr Tom Chen
University of Newcastle, Australia

The scale and scope of the sharing economy continue to expand at exponential rates in all aspects of the tourism and travel industry including: accommodation; transportation; catering – food and beverage; travel guiding and tour operating. The sharing economy has elicited the industry to rethink its definition of tourism and the ways that people will travel and experience tourism in the future, paying particular attention to the broarder stakeholders’ experience in creating core business value. However, the sharing economy brings as many disruptions as it does disputes in the industry. On the one hand, the sharing economy is causing a plethora of disruptions and knock-on effects to entire economic value systems and the socio-economic fabric of economies. On the other hand, disputes among traditional business suppliers argue that the sharing economy bears no difference to a conventional exchange business model and simply offers ways of avoiding regulations, exploiting employees and deceiving customers under the guise of sharing. Nevertheless, more disruptive initiatives are thriving under the sharing economy than conventional business models and they continue to revolutionise the sector and transform tourism.

The sharing economy is widely viewed as a network of connected individuals, communities, and/or organisations, and create value through interaction and integrating idle resources, and revolutionises the customer’s role as a service provider for firms and other customers. The sharing economy has transformed the way tourists and travellers search, book, travel, experience and pay for their tourism and travel experiences. By empowering micro-entrepreneurship and a new breed of entrepreneurs and sub-economies supporting the former, the sharing economy is also causing disruptive changes in living and employment patterns, entrepreneurial opportunities, competitive forces and the structure of economic systems, quality of life and the well-being of citizens and destination communities.

Previous research about the sharing economy in tourism and travel has focused on studying the platform (its business models and functionality), the exchanging actors (e.g. motivations and benefits sought by hosts and guests) as well as the socio-economic and legal impacts of the sharing exchanges on tourism destinations. However, the sharing economy should not only be viewed as a complementary and disruptive new experience and offering in tourism and travel. Future research is needed to also study this new type of micro-entrepreneur and the sub-economies emerging from sharing ecosystems, and their implications on the structure, the operations and the socio-cultural fabric of the economies. Further, competition amongst sharing economy operators provide future business challenges that spark new theories and future research. Hence, there are still many issues and questions that the research has not yet addressed, such as:
·        Whether and how the sharing economy is introducing disruption and innovation in the traditional economy and/or whether the two economies are merging and blurring;
·        The ways traditional companies should respond to such disruptions and better design their business models;
·        The transformational processes and implications of the sharing economy in converting and empowering citizens to become from full-time workers to lifestyle micro-entrepreneurs
·        Does this new form of micro-entrepreneurship in the sharing economy require new entrepreneurial and business skills, new labour and business legislation, and what are they?
·        How does micro-entrepreneurship impact the lives of individual people, their families and their communities?
·        How should educational providers and policy makers respond to such trends?
·        Does the sharing economy create any ethical and/or legal implications such as discrimination, trust, empowerment of female and under-employed people?
·        Whether and how the sharing economy is transforming the profile, preferences and expectations of travel and tourism demand

In this vein, this special issue aims to contribute to our understanding of the evolution, the disruptions innovations, and solutions to disputes caused by the sharing economy in tourism and travel by paying attention to: all the stakeholders being involved and/or affected by the sharing economy; and all the economic, socio-cultural and legal implications of the stakeholders’ social practices. Special interest will be given to the continuously evolving but often ignored role of micro-entrepreneurs in sharing ecosystems, as well as on the impacts of the sharing economy on well-being, employment patterns, entrepreneurial opportunities and the socio-cultural fabric of economies. The special issue welcomes theoretical, empirical, experimental, and case study research contributions. All contributions should clearly address the practical and theoretical implications of the research reported.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
·        Entrepreneurship in the sharing economy
·        Impacts of entrepreneurship on economic and socio-cultural issues such as: employment patterns; capital funding; well-being and quality of life; communities’ coherence, values and systems;
·        Disruptions in the value chain and systems in tourism and travel
·        Business models in the sharing and traditional economy
·        Educational needs and skills for the sharing economy
·        Policy making implications of the sharing economy
·        Innovation in the sharing economy
·        Tourism and travel demand in the sharing economy
·        Ethical and legal issues in the sharing economy

 

References
Badger, A. (2013) The Rise of Invisible Work: Companies like Airbnb and Etsy are redefining what it means to have a "job." Is that good for the economy?.  http://www.citylab.com/work/2013/10/rise-invisible-work/7412/
Botsman, R. (2014). Sharing is not just for startups. Harvard Business Review, 92(3): 23–26.
Botsman, R., & Rogers, R. (2011). What’s mine is yours: How collaborative consumption is changing the way we live. New York: Harper Collins.
Burgelman, R. A., Maidique, M. A., & Wheelwright, S. C. (2001). Strategic management of technology and innovation (3rd ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill.
Burtch, G., Carnahan, S. & Greenwood, B. (2016). Can you gig it? An empirical examination of the gig-economy and entrepreneurial activity. Ross School of Business Working Paper, working paper No. 138
Dredge, D., & Gyimóthy, S. (2015). The collaborative economy and tourism: Critical perspectives, questionable claims and silenced voices. Tourism Recreation Research, 40(3): 286-302.
Edelman, B. & Luca, M. (2014). Digital discrimination: The case of Airbnb. Com. Harvard Business School NOM Unit Working Paper (14-054).
Edelman, B. G., & Geradin, D. (2015). Efficiencies and regulatory shortcuts: How should we regulate companies like Airbnb and Uber?. Harvard Business School NOM Unit Working Paper, 16-26.
Ert, E., Fleischer, A., & Magen, N. (2015)Trust and reputation in the sharing economy: The role of personal photos on Airbnb. Tourism Management, 55: 62-73.
Figueiredo, B., & Scaraboto, D. (2016). The Systemic Creation of Value Through Circulation in Collaborative Consumer Networks. Journal of Consumer Research, 43(4): 509-533.
Hall, J.V. & Krueger, A.B. (2015). An Analysis of the Labor Market for Uber’s Driver-Partners in the United States. Mimeo
Hill, D. (2015). How much is your spare room worth?. IEEE Spectrum52(9): 32-58.
Ikkala, T. (2014). Monetary network hospitality and sociability: A study of hospitality exchange in the context of Airbnb. (Master Thesis). [30/09/2015] https://helda.helsinki.fi/handle/10138/135408
Ikkala, T., & Lampinen, A. (2014). Defining the price of hospitality: Networked hospitality exchange via Airbnb. In Proceedings of the Companion Publication of the 17th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work &Social Computing, pp. 173 – 176
Lee, D. (2016). How Airbnb Short-Term Rentals Exacerbate Los Angeles's Affordable Housing Crisis: Analysis and Policy Recommendations. Harvard Law & Policy Review, 10: 229-255.
Lee, D., Hyun, W., Ryu, J., Lee, W. J., Rhee, W., & Suh, B. (2015). An Analysis of Social Features Associated with Room Sales of Airbnb. In Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference Companion on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing (pp. 219 – 222) ACM
Möhlmann, M. (2015). Collaborative consumption: determinants of satisfaction and the likelihood of using a sharing economy option again. Journal of Consumer Behaviour, 14(3): 193-207.
Scaraboto, D. (2015). Selling, sharing, and everything in between: The hybrid economies of collaborative networks. Journal of Consumer Research, 42(1): 152-176.
Sigala, M. (2014). Collaborative commerce in tourism: implications for research and industry. Current Issues in Tourism, 1 – 10
Sigala, M. (2017). The commercialization of the sharing economy: an investigation of the sub-economies of Airbnb. CAUTHE 2017 conference “Time for big ideas? Re-thinking the field for tomorrow organized by the University of Otago, 7-10 February 2017, Dunedin, New Zealand
Tussyadiah, I. P., & Pesonen, J. (2015). Impacts of peer-to-peer accommodation use on travel patterns. Journal of Travel Research, 1-19.
Tussyadiah, I. P., & Pesonen, J. (2016). Drivers and barriers of peer-to-peer accommodation stay–an exploratory study with American and Finnish travellers. Current Issues in Tourism (1368-3500), 1-18.

Review Process
Each paper submitted to this special issue is subject to the standard review procedures and rules of JTR, i.e.:
·        3 reviewers will be selected for a double-blind review process.
·        Based on the reviewers’ recommendation, the guest editors and the Editor-in-Chief will decide whether the particular submission should be accepted as it is, revised and re-submitted, or rejected.

Key Dates
Deadline for submitting the full papers: 31st of December 2017
Special issue expected publication date:
accepted papers will first be formally published online shortly after acceptance
publication of printed special issue: late 2018  or early 2019

Submission guidelines:
All papers should follow the submission guidelines of the JTR.
All papers will be assessed and reviewed according to the JTR review policies.

When submitting online, please include and state in your cover letter that the paper submission is for the special issue in the “sharing economy”

General submission guidelines for authors can also be found in below link:

Please submit your manuscript by using the journal’s online submission platform:



Marianna Sigala
Marianna Sigala |Professor of Tourism |Director of the Centre for Tourism and Leisure Management (CTLM)
School of Management, University of South Australia Business School  EQUIS Accredited |
' + 61 8 8302 0353   | 7 + 61 8 8302 0512  | * marianna.sigala@unisa.edu.au

Co-Editor of Journal of Service Theory & Practice (formerly published as Managing Service Quality (MSQ)
Regional Editor of Australasia for the International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
Books' Review Editor of Tourismos Journal

Co-Chair of the ENTER 2018
ENTER 2018@Jönköping http://enter2018.org/
Looking forward to seeing you !
 enter

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