Testing the moderated mediation effect of recreation safety climate on the interrelationship of serious leisure, recreation involvement, and flow experience
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recreational safety is critical to the growth of outdoor recreation and adventure tourism. Using a signaling-theory framework, this study investigates the possible moderated mediation effect of recreation safety climate (RSC) on the interrelationship of serious leisure, recreation involvement, and flow experience. The results of a survey of 353 recreational scuba divers at a popular diving site in Kenting, southern Taiwan showed that recreation involvement mediated the relationship between serious leisure and flow experience. We further found that RSC significantly and positively moderated a serious leisure - > recreation involvement - > flow experience model: i.e., that recreation involvement played a strong role as a mediator between serious leisure and flow experience because RSC was high. As well as highlighting the importance of RSC, this study contributes to the body of knowledge on recreational safety, and provides recreation operators with guidelines for RSC implementation.
Management implications
Specifically, low recreation safety climate signals tend to reduce the power of recreation involvement as a mediator. Accordingly, operations and management units should actively seek to establish safe climate signals and culture, and promote the safety certification of recreational areas, to facilitate serious recreationists’ identification of safe sites and thereby enhance their recreational benefits.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism offers a dedicated outlet for research relevant to social sciences and natural resources. The journal publishes peer reviewed original research on all aspects of outdoor recreation planning and management, covering the entire spectrum of settings from wilderness to urban outdoor recreation opportunities. It also focuses on new products and findings in nature based tourism and park management. JORT is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary journal, articles may focus on any aspect of theory, method, or concept of outdoor recreation research, planning or management, and interdisciplinary work is especially welcome, and may be of a theoretical and/or a case study nature. Depending on the topic of investigation, articles may be positioned within one academic discipline, or draw from several disciplines in an integrative manner, with overarching relevance to social sciences and natural resources. JORT is international in scope and attracts scholars from all reaches of the world to facilitate the exchange of ideas. As such, the journal enhances understanding of scientific knowledge, empirical results, and practitioners'' needs. Therefore in JORT each article is accompanied by an executive summary, written by the editors or authors, highlighting the planning and management relevant aspects of the article.