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<title>RURAL RESIDENTS’ PERCEPTION OF RESTRICTIONS TO SELECTED ECOTOURISM SITES AND WELL-BEING IN NORTH CENTRAL NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2112</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2026 07:01:02 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-09T07:01:02Z</dc:date>
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<title>RURAL RESIDENTS’ PERCEPTION OF RESTRICTIONS TO SELECTED ECOTOURISM SITES AND WELL-BEING IN NORTH CENTRAL NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2113</link>
<description>RURAL RESIDENTS’ PERCEPTION OF RESTRICTIONS TO SELECTED ECOTOURISM SITES AND WELL-BEING IN NORTH CENTRAL NIGERIA
OLADIPO, Femi Matthew
Rural residents depend on the same natural resources on which tourism thrive for survival.&#13;
However, ecotourism involves restriction of access to resources within ecotourism sites (ES).&#13;
Previous studies have largely focused on conservation of resources within ES but paid scant&#13;
attention to how restrictions affect the well-being of residents close to the sites. This study,&#13;
therefore, investigated how restriction to selected ES affects rural residents’ well-being in&#13;
North Central Nigeria, with the view to enhancing support for ecotourism development.&#13;
The study was anchored to Len Doyal and Ian Gough’s Theory of Human Needs, while mixed&#13;
method design was adopted. Four ES owned and operated by the governments of Plateau state&#13;
(Jos Wildlife Park and Pandam Game Reserve) and Nassarawa state (Farinruwa Waterfall and&#13;
Peperuwa Lake) were purposively selected for the study. The two states were selected based&#13;
on the presence of ES identified for development by the Nigeria tourism development master&#13;
plan. Systematic sampling was used to select a total of 331 respondents from seven&#13;
purposively selected rural host communities based on their proximity to the ES. Close-ended&#13;
questionnaire was used to collect data on respondent’s socioeconomic characteristics,&#13;
awareness of ecotourism principles (r=0.74), benefits of ecotourism (r=0.89), perceived&#13;
influence of restrictions on well-being (r=0.88) and residents’ well-being status (r=0.89).&#13;
Eighteen key informant interviews were conducted with four site managers, seven community&#13;
heads and seven youth leaders. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics,&#13;
ANOVA and linear regression at ∝=0.05, while qualitative data were content-analysed.&#13;
The respondents’ age was 48.0±13.7 years and 59.1% earned below ₦20,000/month. Also,&#13;
75.3% of the respondents were married and 82.4% were literate. More than half (56.3%) were&#13;
aware that hunting, farming, logging and erection of buildings are restricted in ES. Although&#13;
preservation of forests (83.0%) and interaction with people of other cultures (65.2%) were&#13;
identified as benefits of ecotourism, 51.4% admitted that the benefits they derived from the&#13;
sites had reduced. Restriction was perceived to have negative influence on education&#13;
(20.00±4.6), health and safety (19.19±3.97) and material (18.53±4.64) well-being. Overall,&#13;
52.2% of the respondents had low well-being status. Perceived influence of restriction on wellbeing domains varied significantly across ES (F(3, 243) =5.14). It was higher in Peperuwa lake&#13;
( =109.3) than Pandam Wildlife Park ( =104.4), Farinruwa Waterfall (F( =97.0) and Jos&#13;
Wildlife Park ( =96.2). Non-tourism-related employment (β=0.184), monthly income&#13;
(β=0.182), awareness of ecotourism principles (β=0.214) and benefits of ecotourism (β=0.157)&#13;
were predictors of well-being status. Although ecotourism managers perceived that natural&#13;
resources were at risk of depletion owing to poor economic state of the people, community&#13;
and youth leaders believed that more residents need to be involved in the running of the sites&#13;
so that they could derive more benefits.&#13;
Rural residents in selected ecotourism sites in North Central Nigeria perceived restrictions to&#13;
have imparted negatively on their education, health and safety, and material well-being.&#13;
Therefore, government should use participatory engagement to identify possible alternative&#13;
economic activities for residents close to these sites.
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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