Fairness, legitimacy and the regulation of home-sharing platforms
International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management
ISSN: 0959-6119
Article publication date: 15 September 2020
Issue publication date: 14 October 2020
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to contribute to current hospitality and tourism research on the sharing economy by studying the under-researched aspects of regulatory desirability, moral legitimacy and fairness in the context of home-sharing platforms (e.g. Airbnb).
Design/methodology/approach
Three separate 2×1 between-subjects experimental vignette surveys are used to test the effects of three types of fairness (procedural, interpersonal and informational) on two outcomes: moral legitimacy and regulatory desirability.
Findings
The results of the research show that high perceived fairness across all three types increases moral legitimacy and reduces regulatory desirability. Respondents who perceive a fictional home-sharing platform to be fair consider it to be more legitimate and want it to be less regulated.
Research limitations/implications
Following established practices and reducing external validity, the study uses a fictional scenario and a fictional company for the experimental vignette. The data collection took place in the UK, prohibiting cultural comparisons.
Practical implications
The research is useful for home-sharing platform managers by showing how they can boost moral legitimacy and decrease regulatory desirability through a strong focus on fairness. It can also help policymakers and consumer protection advocates by providing evidence about regulatory desirability and how it is affected by fairness perceptions.
Originality/value
The study adds to hospitality and tourism research by offering theoretically meaningful and practically relevant conclusions about the importance of fairness in driving stakeholder opinions about home-sharing platforms.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The research was funded by the Research Council of Norway within grant agreement 275347 “Fair Labor in the Digitized Economy” and by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Framework Program within grant agreement 732117 “Ps2Share: Participation, Privacy and Power in the Sharing Economy”. We want to thank the anonymous peer reviewers of the article as well as International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management’s Editor-in-Chief Professor Fewzi Okumus for a very constructive peer-review process that helped strengthen the paper.
Citation
Newlands, G. and Lutz, C. (2020), "Fairness, legitimacy and the regulation of home-sharing platforms", International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Vol. 32 No. 10, pp. 3177-3197. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-08-2019-0733
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited