From Heritage Preservation to Sustainable Transition: The Role of Low-Carbon Narratives in Forest-Based Tourism

Gajić, Tamara and Demirović Bajrami, Dunja and Fostikov, Aleksandra and Radovanović, Milan M. and Löffler, Jakub and Brózdowski, Jakub and Henriques, Sofia T. (2026) From Heritage Preservation to Sustainable Transition: The Role of Low-Carbon Narratives in Forest-Based Tourism. Heritage, 9 (5). pp. 1-26. ISSN 2571-9408

[img] Text
heritage-09-00158.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (1MB)
Official URL: https://www.mdpi.com/2571-9408/9/5/158

Abstract

This paper examines how forest by-products (potash, tar, resin and charcoal—PoTaRCh), with a special focus on charcoal production, are presented in contemporary heritage tourism and how different communication frameworks influence the audience’s perceptions and intentions in the context of low-carbon development. The research is based on a combined methodological approach. Qualitative analysis of 70 communication units from the field of heritage tourism identified three dominant communication frames: traditional heritage, ecological-educational frame and future-oriented low-carbon innovation. These findings served as the basis for the experimental part of the research, conducted through an online A/B test on a sample of 212 adult respondents interested in travel, cultural tourism and heritage-based experiences. The results of the experiment indicate that the low-carbon communication framework leads to statistically significantly higher levels of perceived relevance of PoTaRCh, visit intention and positive attitude towards sustainability compared to the traditional framework, with perceived relevance partially mediating these effects. The findings suggest that, although traditional communication patterns still dominate heritage tourism, the future-oriented low-carbon framework shows greater communication potential for attracting a sustainability- and future-oriented audience. By combining the analysis of communication content from several European countries and the experimental testing of communication frameworks, the research provides an empirical contribution to the understanding of the transition from the concept of heritage-as-preservation to heritage-as-transition in contemporary discourses of sustainable tourism

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: PoTaRCh; narrative framing; cultural heritage interpretation; visitor perception; experimental design; mediation analysis; sustainable transition; tourism communication effects
Subjects: G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GF Human ecology. Anthropogeography
S Agriculture > SD Forestry
Depositing User: Slavica Merenik
Date Deposited: 29 Apr 2026 09:42
Last Modified: 29 Apr 2026 11:06
URI: http://rih.iib.ac.rs/id/eprint/1662

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item