2021/2022 AO-ASTHV1001U Collaborative Consumption in Tourism and Hospitality
English Title | |
Collaborative Consumption in Tourism and Hospitality |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Start time of the course | Third Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
AO Study Board for cand.soc.
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Course coordinator | |
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Teaching methods | |
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Last updated on 21-06-2021 |
Relevant links |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This course aims to consolidate consumer
behaviour insights with specific focus on collaborative and moral
consumption in a tourism and hospitality context. The specific
learning objectives of the course are the following:
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The emergent collaborative (sharing or platform) economy has radically disrupted and transformed the consumption of tourism. Platform corporations and cooperatives facilitate short-term accommodation rental, house swapping, ridesharing, free guided tours, couchsurfing, dinner hosting and similar peer-to-peer (P2P) transactions between host communities and guests. This course will provide students with an advanced understanding of social, cultural ad psychological aspects of collaborative consumption, touching upon P2P phenomena in different contexts. Students will develop in-depth knowledge of motivational perspectives, trust mechanisms, peer rating and meritocratic reputational systems. They will critically discuss the changing social dynamics and power asymmetries arising from collaborative platform strategies and consumer performances. You will discuss how public and private actors address current challenges presented by sharing economy disruptions, including skewed competition, misbehaving customers, precarious labour and social discrimination. You will work with complex dilemmas related to new sustainable practices offered by the sharing economy and in your assessment of business models, you will address ethical, social and economic rationales. Through exploring the character, scope, opportunities and challenges of sharing economy disruptions, you will gain both theoretical and practical insights into the digital and collaborative prospects of tourism management. You will learn about different types of sharing platforms, ranging from global platform corporations (such as Airbnb and Uber) to local platform cooperatives This elective is a cross-disciplinary and research based course, integrating the latest advances from sustainable operations management, organisation theory and service management. The diverse thematic and theoretical perspectives will be synthesised in a competitive case format, where students in groups will explore and solve a sustainable design challenge for a given hospitality business. This course requires no previous knowledge of hospitality management (but an undergraduate-level knowledge of the basic principles of organization theory and management is expected). |
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Through providing an overview of relevant
literature about content and methods, as well as some hands-on
insights from research practice the course is designed to be highly
interactive. The course builds upon the principles of problem-based
learning (PBL). Students are expected to devise their own learning
trajectory, by analysing a self-selected empirical case of sharing
platform (ranging from global platform corporations) to local
platform cooperatives. In class activities entail group exercises
and two workshops on sharing economy operations. The introductory
session informs about the aims and structure of the course, the
compulsory and recommended readings as well as the workshop
exercises. The final module entails an in-class feedback session
and briefing about the exam.
Preliminary overview of modules: Module 1. Introduction to the course and the PBL-process (2 hours) Module 2. Why do we share? Understanding collaborative consumption and sharing cultures (3 hours) Module 3. Platformcoops and moral consumption (3 hours) Module 4. Trust mechanisms and reputation systems (3 hours) Module 5. Consumer misbehaviour in the sharing economy (3 hours) Module 6. Value co-creation and collaborative action in the sharing economy (3 hours) Module 7. Workshop: Critical perspectives of social power dynamics in collaborative consumption (3 hours) Module 8: Summing-Up + exam briefing (2 hours) |
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Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Students will receive feedback in various forms
during the course: For instance, through discussions in class,
obligatory group assignments with oral feedback, and written
feedback after the exam.
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Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Course book and literature:
Shaw, D., Carrington, M., & Chatzidakis, A. (Eds.). (2016). Ethics and morality in consumption: interdisciplinary perspectives. Routledge. + 10-12 selected academic journal articles
Akhmedova, A., Mas-Machuca, M., & Marimon, F. (2020). Value co-creation in the sharing economy: The role of quality of service provided by peer. Journal of Cleaner Production, 266, 121736. Belk, R. (2014). You are what you can access: Sharing and collaborative consumption online. Journal of business research, 67(8), 1595-1600. Dredge, D., & Gyimóthy, S. (2015). The collaborative economy and tourism: Critical perspectives, questionable claims and silenced voices. Tourism recreation research, 40(3), 286-302) Gyimóthy (2017). Networked cultures in the collaborative economy. In Dredge, Dianne & Gyimóthy, Szilvia (2017). Collaborative Economy and Tourism: Perspectives, Politics, Policies and Prospects. Cham: Springer International. Tourism on the Verge. (available online at CBS library) Kas, J., Corten, R., & van de Rijt, A. (2020). Reputations in mixed-role markets: a theory and an experimental test. Social Science Research, 85, 102366. Martin, D. M., Lindberg, F., & Fitchett, J. (2019). Why Can’t They Behave? Theorizing Consumer Misbehavior as Regime Misfit between Neoliberal and Nordic Welfare Models. In Nordic Consumer Culture (pp. 71-94). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. Schaefers, T., Wittkowski, K., Benoit, S., & Ferraro, R. (2015). Customer misbehaviour in access-based consumption. Journal of Service Research, 19(1), 3-21.
Roelofsen, M., & Minca, C. (2018). The Superhost. Biopolitics, home and community in the Airbnb dream-world of global hospitality. Geoforum, 91, 170-181. |