Academic literature on the topic 'Peer-to-peer accommodation system'

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Journal articles on the topic "Peer-to-peer accommodation system"

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Cors-Iglesias, Martí, María Belén Gómez-Martín, and Xosé Antón Armesto-López. "Peer-to-Peer Accommodation in Rural Areas of Catalonia: Defining Typologies of Rural Municipalities." Sustainability 12, no. 15 (July 30, 2020): 6145. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12156145.

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This paper presents findings relating to the territorial processes underlying the distribution and location of P2P accommodation in rural parts of Catalonia by establishing a system for classifying rural municipalities based on the volume and growth rate of the supply of this tourist accommodation, its share of the total supply of tourist accommodation, the pressure on the local population, and the function of this supply of accommodation in the regional tourism context. According to the findings, there are three distinct types of rural municipality: (a) Rural municipalities where the volume and growth of the supply of this accommodation are striking, these municipalities are located in the coastal hinterland and in high mountain areas, both of which enjoy high levels of tourism. This supply of accommodation plays a key role in the expansion of the areas of influence of well-established tourist destinations, (b) rural municipalities where this supply of accommodation presents an average volume and growth rate, located in inland areas of Catalonia and in high mountain regions with non-mass tourism development models specializing in rural tourism. This supply is helping boost tourism by expanding and diversifying the range of accommodation, and (c) rural municipalities where no tourist accommodation was available before the arrival of P2P accommodation. These are municipalities in inland areas with a strong agricultural presence, where P2P accommodation is paving the way for tourism.
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Putriya, Anna Riana, Utomo Sarjono Putro, Pri Hermawan, and Kyoichi Kijima. "Co-creation strategy in peer-to-peer accommodation in Bandung tourism context." BISMA (Bisnis dan Manajemen) 12, no. 2 (April 28, 2020): 140. http://dx.doi.org/10.26740/bisma.v12n2.p140-153.

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AbstractCollaborative economy refers to social and economic sharing activities that make entities (customer and peer provider) in-service ecosystem can access services through technology or digital platform. This research aims to give a better understanding of activities and interaction between entities that can potentially elevate the existence of peer-to-peer (P2P) accommodation in Indonesia. Although research regarding the collaborative economy has been accelerating, there has not been a formal conceptualization of interaction from a broadening perspective as a service ecosystem in the context of co-creation. Preliminary study becomes crucial and relevant with the raising of the collaborative economy, based on the consideration that no previous research is considered to be able to explain the dynamics of interaction by using a perspective of Service-Dominant Logic (S-D Logic). This study seeks to answer two research questions, what interactions occur outside consumers, peer providers, platform providers, and how co-creation might be created in the P2P service ecosystem. This conceptual paper draws on the interaction from the perspective of co-creation between entities and stakeholders as a lens by using the systematic-qualitative approach. In general, this study uses the Soft System Methodology (SSM) precisely defining an unstructured situation in the real world. This study tries to initiate the development of phases of co-creation between entities in the service ecosystem. The outcomes of this study enrich the body of knowledge of service science, especially on the way to apply the framework value co-creation. The development of a better service ecosystem across particular engagement remains critical.
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Brauckmann, Stefan. "City tourism and the sharing economy – potential effects of online peer-to-peer marketplaces on urban property markets." Journal of Tourism Futures 3, no. 2 (September 11, 2017): 114–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jtf-05-2017-0027.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the potential effects of the so-called sharing economy on growing city tourism as well as on urban property markets. Design/methodology/approach Official statistical data and a geo-information system (GIS) are used on a small scale in order to identify concentration processes among overnight visitors and the potential concomitant conflicts with other interest groups. Findings Currently, the effects of the sharing economy on housing markets and city tourism are barely measurable and are limited to a few central locations. However, a growing demand can be discerned in housing-like accommodation concepts which can be operated via booking platforms. As there is likely to be strong future growth in this area, continuous market observation (monitoring) is urgently advised. Research limitations/implications Official statistics only allow an analysis of overnight guests staying with larger accommodation providers. Booking platforms for holiday homes and other temporary accommodation options have such little interest in data transparency that the overall phenomenon of city tourism can be addressed only in part. Practical implications Associating various data within the GIS enables municipal administrators and urban planners to identify potential sources of conflict within the property markets in good time and effectively counteract these where possible. Social implications Increases in property prices directly attributable to growing city tourism may lead to the displacement of less financially secure members of the established population as well as businesses. Originality/value The sharing economy is a relatively new research topic which will become increasingly important in future. The identification of potential sources of conflict due to tourist accommodation has therefore not yet been comprehensively carried out on a small scale.
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Nguyen-Van, Triet. "A Power Control Method for Hybrid Electrical Accommodation Systems." Energies 14, no. 20 (October 15, 2021): 6681. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en14206681.

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This paper presents a power control method for a hybrid electrical system, which enhances a conventional main AC grid by adding a DC sub-grid in parallel. In this system, each prosumer connects to the sub-grid via a couple of half-bridge inverters of a device called a power router. All of the power routers connected to the sub-grid are controlled such that they maintain the voltage of the sub-grid equally, which is an essential feature of peer-to-peer power accommodation without synchronization. This paper proposes an adaptive hysteresis current-control technique for controlling sub-grid-connected inverters that maintains the voltage of the sub-grid while accommodating a given power. The proposed control method also balances currents between positive and negative lines of the sub-grid simultaneously. The proposed control method is implemented on a high-speed FPGA-based digital controller and is evaluated on three prototypes of the power router. The experimental results show that the proposed method yields fast and stable responses and enables the power router to accommodate power with a high accuracy.
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Yiu, Chung-Yim, and Ka-Shing Cheung. "Urban Zoning for Sustainable Tourism: A Continuum of Accommodation to Enhance City Resilience." Sustainability 13, no. 13 (June 30, 2021): 7317. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13137317.

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While governments around the world are embarking on the path to recovery from the COVID-19 crisis, sustainable tourism planning is crucial, in particular in the hospitality sector, which enhances the resilience of destinations. However, many destination management models overlook the role of urban zoning. Little is known about the impacts of land-use zoning on the hospitality and property industries, especially with the current disruption of short-term peer-to-peer accommodation like Airbnb. Euclidean zoning, also known as effects-based planning, has long been criticised in destination management for its exclusionary nature and lack of flexibility. With exclusionary zoning, property owners may only be able to use their land sub-optimally, and cities will be less efficient in responding to market changes in short-term and long-term accommodation demands, but planning intentions can be better controlled, and the property supply can be more stable. Taking Hong Kong as a noteworthy case, this study puts forward a conceptual framework that enables comparison of a novel zoning approach with the traditional zoning approach. This novel zoning approach encompasses both the short- and long-term rental sectors as a continuum of accommodation, ranging from hotels and serviced apartments to Airbnb and rental housing units under a unified regulatory and planning regime to enhance the switching options value. This novel zoning system can gear up the tourism sector with the rapid growth of the sharing economy and aligns with sustainable tourism to ensure long-term socioeconomic benefits to related stakeholders. We extract the data of Airbnb listings to construct the first Airbnb ADR Index (ADRI) by Repeat-sales method, and the results support our Switching Option Hypothesis.
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Guyader, Hugo. "No one rides for free! Three styles of collaborative consumption." Journal of Services Marketing 32, no. 6 (September 10, 2018): 692–714. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jsm-11-2016-0402.

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Purpose This paper aims to focus on collaborative consumption, that is, the peer-to-peer (P2P) exchange of goods and services facilitated by online platforms. Anchored in the access paradigm, collaborative consumption (e.g. accommodation rental and ridesharing services) differs from commercial services offered by firms (e.g. business-to-customer [B2C] carsharing). The aim of this study is to examine the nuanced styles of collaborative consumption in relation to market-mediated access practices and socially mediated sharing practices. Design/methodology/approach Following the general research trend on mobility services, the context of long-distance ridesharing is chosen. Data collection was conducted using participant observation as peer service provider, 11 ethnographic interviews of consumers and a netnographic study of digital artifacts. Findings Using practice theory, ten ridesharing activities were identified. These activities and the nuances in the procedures, understandings and engagements in the ridesharing practice led to the distinction of three styles of collaborative consumption: communal collaborative consumption, which is when participants seek pro-social relationships in belonging to a community; consumerist collaborative consumption, performed by participants who seek status and convenience in the access lifestyle; and opportunistic collaborative consumption, when participants seek to achieve monetary gain or personal benefits from abusive activities. Originality/value By taking a phenomenological approach on collaborative consumption, this study adds to the understanding of the sharing economy as embedded in both a utilitarian/commercial economic system and a non-market/communal social system. The three styles of collaborative consumption propose a framework for future studies differentiating P2P exchanges from other practices (i.e. B2C access-based services and sharing).
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Liang, Sai, Markus Schuckert, Rob Law, and Chih-Chien Chen. "Be a “Superhost”: The importance of badge systems for peer-to-peer rental accommodations." Tourism Management 60 (June 2017): 454–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tourman.2017.01.007.

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Wang, Wanfei, Chengcheng Su, Jin Hooi Chan, and Xiaoguang Qi. "Operational risks and coping strategies of micro-enterprise in peer-to-peer accommodation service sector: evidences from China." Industrial Management & Data Systems 120, no. 9 (August 14, 2020): 1759–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/imds-04-2020-0238.

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PurposeFocusing on the supply side of peer-to-peer (P2P) accommodation service sector, this study identifies the emerging types of micro-enterprise operators in the growing Chinese market, and investigate their respective operational risks and coping strategies.Design/methodology/approachA qualitative study was adopted to explore the micro-enterprise in peer-to-peer accommodation in China. Twenty semi-structured interviews were conducted to explore the operators' behaviors in the service sector.FindingsBased on the types of property ownership and forms of interaction, four groups of operators were identified, i.e. hospitable sharers, remote sharers, roommates and butlers. This study uncovers their operational risk factors (safety, cost, legal and social, psychological) and respective coping strategies.Originality/valueMost prior studies on P2P accommodation sector are conducted from the demand side about customer behaviors. This study not only enhances the understanding of the hosts in the sharing economy by developing a novel typology of operators, but also provides insights into the operational behaviors on an individual operator perspective.
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Tavana, Madjid, Sayed Mohammad Hossein Mousavi, Hassan Mina, and Farhad Salehian. "A dynamic decision support system for evaluating peer-to-peer rental accommodations in the sharing economy." International Journal of Hospitality Management 91 (October 2020): 102653. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhm.2020.102653.

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Mahadevan, Renuka. "Examination of motivations and attitudes of peer-to-peer users in the accommodation sharing economy." Journal of Hospitality Marketing & Management 27, no. 6 (April 6, 2018): 679–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19368623.2018.1431994.

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Book chapters on the topic "Peer-to-peer accommodation system"

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Li, Songwei, Zhen Wang, Chi Zhang, Lingbo Wei, Jianqing Liu, Ying Ma, and Yuguang Fang. "A Privacy-Preserving Peer-to-Peer Accommodation System Based on a Credit Network." In Wireless Algorithms, Systems, and Applications, 326–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-86130-8_26.

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Röslmaier, Michael, and David Albarrán. "Local commitment and withdrawal in the wake of conspicuous Airbnb place dynamics on a cold-water island." In Peer-to-peer accommodation and community resilience: implications for sustainable development, 94–110. Wallingford: CABI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789246605.0008.

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Abstract In recent years, Airbnb has gained tremendous attention in sense-of-place and community-resilience research. Yet, we find few scholarly efforts to relate particular issues of community resilience to a sense of place that emerges in the wake of conspicuous place dynamics of Airbnb beyond the urban context. In this case study on Heimaey, Iceland, we use geographic information systems (GIS), AirDNA data on Airbnb, and in-depth interviews to address this research gap. We find that as professional Airbnbs concentrate in the 'downtown' (town centre) area, residents mourn over lost pasts with a heightened sense of place that fuels intentions to withdraw. The isolated, casual, Airbnb landscape in the 'residential west', meanwhile, still allows locals to retain stewardship over place meanings, identities and community structure, which translates into increasing commitment out of fear of losing these privileges in the near future. This chapter encourages future research to become concerned with Airbnb developments in non-urban environments where sense of place and community resilience are both intrinsically linked and negotiated by different types of host activities in different locations.
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Goodfellow, Denise Lawungkurr, Anne Hardy, and Sara Dolnicar. "Communication-Regulated Social Systems." In Peer-to-Peer Accommodation Networks. Goodfellow Publishers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/9781911396512-3618.

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Peer-to-peer accommodation networks are considered a relatively new phenomenon. But how new are they really? This chapter explores social interactions on these networks and draws parallels to people whose existence has been dated back 65,000 years: Australian Indigenous communities. Despite their very different appearance, rules of engagement and context, traditional communities have far more in common with modern day neo-tribes that may have been thought.
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Conference papers on the topic "Peer-to-peer accommodation system"

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Sun, Yongqiang, Yanping Guo, Dina Liu, and Nan Wang. "Exploring Consumers’ Continuance Intention to Use Peer-to-Peer Accommodation Service: The Role of Psychological Ownership." In Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.24251/hicss.2019.568.

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D’Sena, Peter. "Decolonising the curriculum. Contemplating academic culture(s), practice and strategies for change." In Learning Connections 2019: Spaces, People, Practice. University College Cork||National Forum for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/lc2019.13.

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In 2015, students at the University of Cape Town called for the statue of Cecil Rhodes, the 19th century British coloniser, to be removed from their campus. Their clarion call, in this increasingly widespread #RhodesMustFall movement, was that for diversity, inclusion and social justice to become a lived reality in higher education (HE), the curriculum has to be ‘decolonised’. (Chantiluke, et al, 2018; Le Grange, 2016) This was to be done by challenging the longstanding, hegemonic Eurocentric production of knowledge and dominant values by accommodating alternative perspectives, epistemologies and content. Moreover, they also called for broader institutional changes: fees must fall, and the recruitment and retention of both students and staff should take better account of cultural diversity rather than working to socially reproduce ‘white privilege’ (Bhambra, et al, 2015) Concerns had long been voiced by both academics and students about curricula dominated by white, capitalist, heterosexual, western worldviews at the expense of the experiences and discourses of those not perceiving themselves as fitting into those mainstream categories (for an Afrocentric perspective, see inter alia, Asante, 1995; Hicks & Holden, 2007) The massification of HE across race and class lines in the past four decades has fuelled these debates; consequentially, the ‘fitness’ of curricula across disciplines are increasingly being questioned. Student representative bodies have also voiced the deeper concern that many pedagogic practices and assessment techniques in university systems serve to reproduce society’s broader inequalities. Certainly, in the UK, recent in-depth research has indicated that the outcomes of inequity are both multifaceted and tangible, with, for example, graduating students from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) backgrounds only receiving half as many ‘good’ (first class and upper second) degree classifications as their white counterparts (RHS, 2018). As a consequence of such findings and reports, the momentum for discussing the issues around diversifying and decolonising the university has gathered pace. Importantly, however, as the case and arguments have been expressed not only through peer reviewed articles and reports published by learned societies, but also in the popular press, the core issues have become more accessible than most academic debates and more readily discussed by both teachers and learners (Arday and Mirza, 2018; RHS, 2018). Hence, more recently, findings about the attainment/awarding gap have been taken seriously and given prominence by both Universities UK and the National Union of Students, though their shared conclusion is that radical (though yet to be determined) steps are needed if any movements or campaigns, such as #closingthegap are to find any success. (Universities UK, 2019; NUS, 2016; Shay, 2016)
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