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Articles

Scenario planning as a tool to manage tourism uncertainties during the era of COVID-19: a case study of Arizona, USA

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon &
Pages 1063-1073
Received 22 Jun 2021
Accepted 10 Jan 2022
Published online: 02 Feb 2022
 

ABSTRACT

As the tourism industry faces a long road to full recovery in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, this study utilized a scenario planning method to depict widely contrasting conditions in which tourism recovery in the U.S. state of Arizona will need to navigate. To collect data, we held a scenario planning session in June 2020 with 24 participants representing various stakeholder groups, such as public land management agencies, tourism businesses, destination management organizations, and a multidisciplinary panel of experts from the fields of public health, transportation, travel and tourism, and epidemiology. Six critical drivers of tourism recovery were identified, which included public health status, performance of the economy, destination availability, government policy, consumer confidence, and leadership messaging. Among these six critical drivers, public health status and performance of the economy were determined to be the two most influential and most uncertain determinants of tourism recovery and were used to develop four plausible scenarios consisting of a worst-case, best-case and two mid-level scenarios. As social inequities and economic and public health devastation appeared in the scenarios, the crucial methodological contributions and implications for tourism stakeholders, including destination communities, destination managers and local governments, are discussed.

Acknowledgments

An earlier and shorter version of this paper was presented at the Travel and Tourism Research Conference in Fort Worth, Texas, in June 2021. Only 150-words abstract of the conference was published in the conference proceedings.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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