Skip to main content

A “RELATIVE ESCAPE”? THE IMPACT OF CONSTRAINTS ON WOMEN WHO TRAVEL SOLO

Buy Article:

$30.00 + tax (Refund Policy)

Women in contemporary Western society have increased options, resources, and opportunities to access a greater array of tourism and leisure choices. Yet the freedoms women have to consume these choices, and to access satisfying leisure and travel experiences, may be constrained by their social and gendered location as females. Leisure-based research has shown that women tend to be more highly and intensely constrained in their leisure pursuits, particularly when these activities are undertaken out of the home or in the outdoors. Little research, however, has explored how constraints impact on women's experiences in a tourism context, especially when they travel “solo.” This article presents results of a qualitative, exploratory study of 40 Australian women's experiences of solo travel. In-depth interviews with these women reveal that constraints do exist and exert influence on their lives and travel experiences in a myriad of ways. Four interlinking categories of constraint were identified through a grounded approach to data analysis: sociocultural, personal, practical, and spatial. Further definition of these categories evolved, depending on where the women were situated in their travel experience (i.e., “pretravel” or “during travel”). The women's solo travel constraints will be presented and defined in this article, and practical implications for the tourism industry will also be discussed.

Keywords: Australia; Constraints; Gender; Leisure; Solo travel; Tourist experience; Women

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: *School of Tourism and Hospitality Management, Southern Cross University, Australia 2: †Department of Sport and Leisure Studies, School of Education, University of Waikato, New Zealand

Publication date: 01 January 2005

More about this publication?
  • Tourism Review International is a peer-reviewed journal that advances excellence in all fields of tourism research, promotes high-level tourism knowledge, and nourishes cultural awareness in all sectors of the tourism industry by integrating industry and academic perspectives. Its international and interdisciplinary nature ensures that the needs of those interested in tourism are served by documenting industry practices, discussing tourism management and planning issues, providing a forum for primary research and critical examinations of previous research, and by chronicling changing tourism patterns and trends at the local, regional and global scale.
  • Access Key
  • Free content
  • Partial Free content
  • New content
  • Open access content
  • Partial Open access content
  • Subscribed content
  • Partial Subscribed content
  • Free trial content