dc.description.abstract | Tourism plays a vital role in many people’s lives, whether one enjoys being a tourist traveling
to different countries or being a resident of a tourism-heavy economy. Often, countries in the
Global South heavily depend on tourism, utilizing it as a key development strategy to foster
economic growth. Amongst the most tourism-dependent countries in the world are Small Island
Developing States such as Barbados. While tourism-induced economic development brings
many benefits, it also often disadvantages residents. In Barbados, the effects on the local
population, especially coastal residents, are often overlooked. Thus, this thesis explores how
coastal residents experience the pressures and disruptions caused by tourism development,
focusing on place-based displacement. Rather than understanding displacement only as
physical relocation, the research conceptualizes it as a process, causing material, emotional,
and spiritual losses. The fieldwork was conducted in the southwestern coastal strip of Barbados
through 46 semi-structured interviews with residents, supported by observations and visual
methods. One neighborhood currently faces the threat of displacement as part of a tourism
project, while others report ongoing changes to their lived environment. The findings show that
displacement is not always immediate or visible. Residents experience a slow, violent loss of
place, spirituality, self, identity, and security through restricted beach access, the expansion of
hotel infrastructure, and the pressure of physical displacement. This often leads to feelings of
neglect, exclusion, uncertainty, and frustration. By focusing on how displacement is felt and
made sense of in everyday life, this thesis offers a deeper understanding of tourism’s social
impacts. It shows that development can produce powerful forms of exclusion that alter the way
people relate to their environment. The study highlights the importance of recognizing place-
based dimensions of displacement in tourism planning, particularly in Small Island Developing
States contexts, where land, identity, and belonging are often deeply tied. | |