A Critical Realist Explanation of the Shifting Role of Destination Marketing Organisations: Evidence from Zambia's Tourism Destination System

Authors

Dr Ephraim Kaang'andu Belemu

Department of School of Postgraduate, Africa Reserach University (Zambia)

Erastus M. Mwanaumo

Department of School of Postgraduate, Africa Reserach University (Zambia)

Article Information

DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.91100322

Subject Category: Marketing

Volume/Issue: 9/11 | Page No: 4142-4150

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2025-11-27

Accepted: 2025-12-08

Published: 2025-12-09

Abstract

The role of Destination Marketing Organisations (DMOs) has been the subject of persistent questioning in both academic literature and professional practice since the early 2000s. While scholars acknowledge that the expected role of DMOs is shifting among various tourism industry stakeholders, the underlying causal mechanisms producing these shifts remain inadequately explained. This study employs Critical Realism (CR) as a theoretical framework to investigate the shifting expected role of the DMO in Zambia's tourism destination system. Using a qualitative case study design with thirty informants from the southern tourism circuit, the study applied Bhaskar's stratified ontology and Archer's morphogenetic model to explain the observed phenomena. The findings reveal that the shifting role of the DMO emerges from the interplay between structural conditioning forces (path-dependence mechanisms including government policy directions, regional structures, market forces, cultural history, and international organisation influences) and social interactions among destination stakeholders. The study identifies morphogenetic processes characterised by structural elaboration rather than morphostasis, explaining why policy propositions fail to produce intended outcomes despite stakeholder expectations shifting. This research contributes to DMO theory by demonstrating how CR provides explanatory adequacy for understanding destination system dynamics, offering practical implications for tourism policy formulation in emerging destinations.

Keywords

Critical Realism; Destination Marketing Organisation; Morphogenetic Model

Downloads

References

1. Archer, M. S. (1989). Culture and Agency: The Place of Culture in Social Theory. Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

2. Archer, M. S. (1995). Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach. Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

3. Archer, M. S. (2000). Being Human: The Problem of Agency. Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

4. Banifatemeh, H., Shields, R., & Golabi, F. (2018). Social Realism and Sociology of Meanings. Current Sociology, 66(3), 445-461. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

5. Bhaskar, R. (1978). A Realist Theory of Science (2nd ed.). Harvester Press. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

6. Bhaskar, R. (1979). The Possibility of Naturalism: A Philosophical Critique of the Contemporary Human Sciences. Harvester Press. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

7. Bhaskar, R. (1995). Dialectic: The Pulse of Freedom. Verso. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

8. Bhaskar, R. (1998). General Introduction. In M. Archer, R. Bhaskar, A. Collier, T. Lawson, & A. Norrie (Eds.), Critical Realism: Essential Readings (pp. ix-xxiv). Routledge. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

9. Carter, B., & New, C. (2005). Making Realism Work: Realist Social Theory and Empirical Research. Routledge. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

10. Dredge, D. (2016). Are DMOs on a path to redundancy? Tourism Recreation Research, 41(3), 348-353. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

11. Fletcher, A. J. (2017). Applying critical realism in qualitative research: methodology meets method. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 20(2), 181-194. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

12. Garud, R., & Karnøe, P. (2001). Path Dependence and Creation. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

13. Gorski, P. S. (2018). After positivism: Critical realism and historical sociology. In G. Steinmetz (Ed.), Routledge Handbook of Historical Sociology (pp. 43-56). Routledge. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

14. Gyr, U. (2010). The History of Tourism: Structures on the Path to Modernity. European History Online. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

15. Hedlund-de Witt, A. (2013). Critical Realism: A Synoptic Overview and Resource Guide for Integral Scholars. Meta-Integral Foundation. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

16. Hristov, D., & Zehrer, A. (2015). The destination paradigm continuum revisited: DMOs serving as leadership networks. Tourism Review, 70(2), 116-131. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

17. Hristov, D., & Zehrer, A. (2019). Does distributed leadership have a place in destination management organisations? A policy-makers perspective. Current Issues in Tourism, 22(9), 1095-1115. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

18. Hristov, D., Minocha, S., & Ramkissoon, H. (2020). Transformation of destination leadership networks. Tourism Management Perspectives, 35, 100713. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

19. Jakulin, T. J. (2016). A Systems Approach to Tourism: A Methodology for Defining Complex Tourism System. Organizacija, 49(3), 208-215. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

20. Ministry of Tourism and Arts. (2018). Zambia Tourism Master Plan 2018-2038. Government of the Republic of Zambia. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

21. Morrison, A. M. (2012). Marketing and Managing Tourism Destinations. Routledge. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

22. Pike, S. (2016). Destination Marketing Organisations – Research Opportunities in an Era of Uncertainty. Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Tourism, 1-8. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

23. Pike, S., & Page, S. (2014). Destination Marketing Organizations and destination marketing: A narrative analysis of the literature. Tourism Management, 41, 202-227. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

24. Reinhold, S., Laesser, C., & Beritelli, P. (2015). 2014 St. Gallen Consensus on Destination Management. Journal of Destination Marketing & Management, 4(2), 137-142. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

25. Reinhold, S., Beritelli, P., & Laesser, C. (2017). The business model concept in tourism research. In Business Models and ICT Technologies for the Tourism Industry (pp. 1-22). IGI Global. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

26. Ritchie, J. R. B., & Crouch, G. I. (2003). The Competitive Destination: A Sustainable Tourism Perspective. CABI Publishing. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

27. Sayer, A. (2004). Why Critical Realism? In S. Fleetwood & S. Ackroyd (Eds.), Critical Realist Applications in Organisation and Management Studies (pp. 6-20). Routledge. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

28. The Tourism and Hospitality Act Number 13 of 2015. Government of the Republic of Zambia. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

29. Wang, Y. (2011). Destination Marketing and Management: Scope, Definition and Structures. In Y. Wang & A. Pizam (Eds.), Destination Marketing and Management: Theories and Applications (pp. 1-20). CABI Publishing. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

30. Wang, Y., & Pizam, A. (2011). Destination Marketing and Management: Theories and Applications. CABI Publishing. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

31. World Tourism Organisation. (2019). UNWTO Tourism Definitions. UNWTO. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

32. Wynn, D., & Williams, C. K. (2012). Principles for conducting critical realist case study research in information systems. MIS Quarterly, 36(3), 787-810. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

Metrics

Views & Downloads

Similar Articles