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Participant-based sport events like ultramarathons are becoming increasingly popular but little is known about how they influence key stakeholders' understandings of place and how these understandings fit into the tourism discourse on sustainability. The purpose of this study was, therefore, to gain insight into the sustainability of this type of active sport tourism event by examining the way that residents and visiting runners understand place (Grande Cache, Canada) in the context of the Canadian Death Race (CDR) ultramarathon. Interviews about place inclusive of a photo elicitation component were conducted with 15 residents and 20 visiting runners during the 2014 event. Thematic analysis resulted in the identification of four themes including: identity, dependence, physical setting, and social setting. Although they shared basic understandings of Grande Cache as a place of industry surrounded by nature, residents expressed stronger place identity than runners. Runners identified more with the activity of running but were connected to Grande Cache through place dependence and embodied experience. This discrepancy suggests that the sustainability of the CDR is at risk. Runners currently exhibit a high level of place dependence on Grande Cache, but a growing supply of race options poses a substitution threat.
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Tom Hinch
University of Alberta
Nicholas L. Holt
University of Calgary
Journal of Sustainable Tourism
University of Alberta
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Hinch et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69db150c4e9a02dbaa684eb5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09669582.2016.1253703
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