Can post-vaccine 'vaxication' rejuvenate global tourism? nexus between COVID-19 branded destination safety, travel shaming, incentives and the rise of vaxication travel
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Zaman, Umer
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Can post-vaccine 'vaxication' rejuvenate global tourism? nexus between COVID-19 branded destination safety, travel shaming, incentives and the rise of vaxication travel
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Abstract
Vaxication (i.e., post-vaccination travel) and branding destinations for COVID-19 safety
have emerged as the cornerstones to fully rebound global tourism. Numerous destination brands are
now stimulating tourism demand through realigned travel incentives specifically for fully vaccinated
travelers. However, there is growing fear and incidents of travel shaming across destinations,
especially due to the recent outbreaks of the highly contagious COVID-19 ‘delta and omicron’ variants.
Addressing this critical research gap, the present study makes pioneering efforts to empirically
examine the effects of COVID-19 branded destination safety (CBDS) on vaxication intentions, under
the moderating influence of travel shaming and travel incentives. Drawing on study data from
560 fully-vaccinated residents from Hawaii, United States and structural equation modeling (SEM)
with Mplus, the evidence suggests that the positive impact of CBDS on vaxication intention can
be further strengthened by travel incentives, or weakened when travel shaming picks up more
momentum. Besides the validation of newly developed scales, the study offers strategic insights
based on dominant theories (e.g., theory of planned behavior and protection motivation theory) to
interpret the changing tourism demand, and to transform the emerging challenges into opportunities
through and beyond the pandemic.
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Sustainability 2021, 13, 14043
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