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Shruti Sharma and Nidhi Sharma
Exploring historically significant and often eerie locations, dark tourism has surged in popularity lately. With advancing technology, online platforms have become influential…
Abstract
Exploring historically significant and often eerie locations, dark tourism has surged in popularity lately. With advancing technology, online platforms have become influential tools that amplify the dark tourism encounter. This research delves into how online platforms contribute to enriching the dark tourism experience. It addresses the effective utilization of online media to improve exploration, understanding, and engagement with dark tourism destinations.
The research questions focus on how online platforms enhance exploration and interpretation, their impacts on visitor understanding and emotional engagement, and their facilitation of community engagement and knowledge sharing within dark tourism.
Employing a mixed-methods access, in addition to literature review, qualitative interviews, and quantitative surveys, the study adopts a theoretical framework integrating destination management, digital marketing, and visitor experience theories.
This empirical study adds to the existing literature on how online platforms influence dark tourism, providing practical insights for destination managers and platform developers to enhance visitor experiences and engagement at dark tourism destinations.
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Arti Yadav, Parul Yadav and K. Latha
According to G20, ‘Inclusiveness basically signifies the accessibility of the various resources (goods, services, and livelihoods) on a commercially viable basis to the…
Abstract
According to G20, ‘Inclusiveness basically signifies the accessibility of the various resources (goods, services, and livelihoods) on a commercially viable basis to the economically vulnerable section of the society through making them part of the organizations' value chain as customers, retailers, distributors, and suppliers’. With the increased application of digital technology in every sphere of life, the concept of inclusiveness has moved to e-inclusiveness. So, the present chapter tried to investigate the conceptual journey from inclusiveness to e-inclusiveness from business and financial system aspects. Further, it presents an insight into how the e-inclusiveness aspect impacts the poverty level mainly from the developing country's perspective. The study also suggests that from the perspective of developed as well as developing economies, the public and private sector players strive to develop an effective financial system incorporating an inclusiveness aspect.
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Claire Harris, Stephanie Perkiss and Farzana Aman Tanima
Chocolate production and cocoa supply chains are rife with social and environmental challenges. Chocolate companies commonly make claims that their products are “sustainable”…
Abstract
Purpose
Chocolate production and cocoa supply chains are rife with social and environmental challenges. Chocolate companies commonly make claims that their products are “sustainable”, giving little guidance on what this means. The aim of this paper is to conduct a scoping review to synthesise the accounting literature related to the chocolate industry and sustainability and develop a research agenda for accounting scholarship.
Design/methodology/approach
The scoping review followed Arksey and O’Malley’s (2005) five-stage framework for a scoping review. Nineteen accounting journals were searched for literature on “chocolate OR cocoa AND sustainability” from 2000 to 2023. A total of 171 papers were identified through the search, of which 18 were deemed relevant and included for thematic analysis. The themes are analysed using a conceptual framework on accountability.
Findings
Analysis of the relevant literature revealed three distinct perspectives on sustainability in the chocolate industry. These include critique on the problems related to top-down accountability approaches in the chocolate industry; that accountability mechanisms have fallen short in managing sustainability challenges; and that sustainability interventions are driven by profit motives. The themes further reveal a lack of accountability in the industry for marginalised voices.
Originality/value
The scoping review methodology used in this study offers insights into the diverse perspectives on sustainability in the chocolate industry. This research adds valuable knowledge to the field by uncovering nuanced issues around accountability and sustainability and highlighting the need for future research for accountability for sustainable chocolate production.
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