Rural tourism is becoming more popular as an alternative livelihood diversification strategy, local business growth, and rural community empowerment strategy in rural India. This review paper is based on secondary literature, which explores the interplay of rural tourism and rural livelihoods in the Kullu district of Himachal Pradesh in terms of social work. The findings indicate that the intensive development of homestays, eco-tourism, heritage-based tourism, transport services, handicrafts, and small hospitality businesses has generated alternative sources of income and also increased social capital due to improvement of skills, network, and market connections. Simultaneously, disparities in the access to sources, seasonality, environment-related pressures, cultural commodification, and historical gendered inequalities demonstrate substantial deficiencies. Social work approach anticipates equity, involvement, cultural conservation, and safeguarding of marginalized families beyond the economic variables. Combining the concepts of social work practice and Sustainable Livelihood Framework, the study identifies a lack of participatory planning, inclusion in governance, livelihood diversification, environmental protection, and targeted capacity building among women, youth, and socially disadvantaged populations needs to be established. The paper summarizes that rural tourism may be a source of resilience, empowerment, and well-being of communities when it is based on people-oriented, community-based strategies, but when it is poorly managed, it may also increase inequalities and destroy local ecological and cultural resources. The themes of policy directions are the community ownership, open benefit-sharing, and monitoring mechanisms to capture social, cultural and environmental benefits as well as the economic benefits.
Thakur et al. (Sat,) studied this question.