Integrative Review on Tourism Gentrification and Lifestyle Migration: Pathways Towards Regenerative Tourism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Research question 1 (RQ 1): What is the scope and evolution of the academic literature on tourism gentrification and lifestyle migration, as reflected in publication trends, geographic and institutional contributions, and key sources? This question is addressed through a bibliometric analysis of peer-reviewed literature indexed in the Web of Science (WoS) and Scopus, using VOSviewer and Bibliometrix to identify publication trends and map output over time.
- Research question 2 (RQ 2): What are the dominant conceptual clusters and thematic structures in the literature on tourism gentrification and lifestyle migration, and how are they connected across spatial and governance levels? Co-occurrence mapping techniques are used to identify dominant themes, which are then categorised and analysed based on their spatial orientation and conceptual scope.
- Research question 3 (RQ 3): Under which conditions can tourism gentrification transition from a disruptive force to a regenerative driver? This question is explored through an integrative review of studies focusing on tourism gentrification, with attention to contextual and governance-related factors that influence its potential transformation.
- Research question 4 (RQ 4): What pathways allow lifestyle migration to support community regeneration and resilience? The relevant literature on lifestyle migration is examined to identify conceptual linkages and documented mechanisms that enable community-level regeneration.
- Research question 5 (RQ 5): What are the key challenges and opportunities in integrating tourism gentrification and lifestyle migration into regenerative tourism frameworks? A cross-cluster synthesis is conducted to examine how these two processes intersect and to inform the development of an integrative framework for regenerative transitions.
2. Conceptual Foundations and Intersections
2.1. Key Concepts and Theoretical Grounding: Gentrification, Lifestyle Migration, and Regeneration in Tourism Contexts
2.1.1. Lifestyle Migration
2.1.2. Gentrification
2.1.3. Regenerative Tourism
2.2. Conceptual Intersections
2.3. Regulatory and Governance Frameworks
2.4. Economic Drivers and Impacts of Lifestyle Migration, Gentrification, and Regenerative Tourism
3. Data and Methodology
4. Research Results and Discussion
4.1. Dataset
4.2. Stage 1: Differentiating Bibliometric Results and Conceptual Structuring
4.2.1. Bibliometric Results
4.2.2. Conceptual Structuring
4.3. Conceptual Weakness in the Treatment of Regenerative Tourism
4.4. Stage 2: “Reframing Tourism Futures: An Integrative Review of Gentrification, Lifestyle Migration, and Regenerative Pathways”
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PICOTS | |
---|---|
POPULATION OF INTEREST (P) | Peer-reviewed academic literature focused on lifestyle migration, gentrification, and tourism, retrieved from the Web of Science and Scopus. |
INTERVENTION (I) | A two-stage methodology combining bibliometric analysis (to map trends and clusters) and an integrative literature review (to synthesise conceptual and methodological insights). |
COMPARATIVE INTERVENTION (C) | Cross-analysis of thematic clusters derived from bibliometric mapping, compared across temporal trends, spatial levels (micro, meso, macro), and disciplinary approaches. |
OUTCOMES (O) | Identification of research gaps, synthesis of literature across clusters, and development of an integrative multi-level framework for regenerative tourism. |
TIMEFRAME (T) | No lower time limit; publications up to 30 September 2024. |
SETTING (S) | Academic and research contexts that discuss lifestyle migration, tourism, and gentrification. |
WoS search string | TS = ((“lifestyle migrat*” OR “amenity” OR “resident* touris*” OR “retirement migrat*” OR “second home” OR “expatriate communit*”) AND (“gentrification” OR “displacem*” OR “real estate speculation” OR “spatial inequality”) AND (“touris*” OR “travel”)) |
Scopus search string | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((“lifestyle migrat*” OR “amenity” OR “resident* touris*” OR “retirement migrat*” OR “second home” OR “expatriate communit*”) AND (“gentrification” OR “displacem*” OR “real estate speculation” OR “spatial inequality”) AND (“touris*” OR “travel”)) |
Timespan | 2007:2024 |
---|---|
Sources (Journals, Books, etc.) | 45 |
Documents | 61 |
Annual Growth Rate % | 6.68 |
Document Average Age | 5.13 |
Average citations per doc | 17.82 |
References | 2899 |
Document | DOI | Year | Local Citations | Global Citations | LC/GC Ratio (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SOLANA-SOLANA M, 2010, GEOFORUM | [63] | 2010 | 5 | 114 | 4.39 |
VAN NOORLOOS F, 2016, HABITAT INT | [67] | 2016 | 4 | 33 | 12.12 |
COCOLA-GANT A, 2020, URBAN STUD | [64] | 2020 | 4 | 115 | 3.48 |
LORENZEN M, 2021, J RURAL STUD | [66] | 2021 | 4 | 22 | 18.18 |
MARJAVAARA R, 2009, TOUR PLAN DEV | [68] | 2009 | 3 | 17 | 17.65 |
HAYES M, 2015, J LAT AM GEOGR | [69] | 2015 | 3 | 25 | 12.00 |
NAVARRETE ESCOBEDO D, 2020, URBAN STUD | [70] | 2020 | 3 | 24 | 12.50 |
BANTMAN-MASUM E, 2020, URBAN STUD | [65] | 2020 | 3 | 16 | 18.75 |
DONALDSON R, 2009, GEOGRAPHY | [71] | 2009 | 2 | 35 | 5.71 |
HAYES M, 2020, URBAN STUD | [72] | 2020 | 2 | 45 | 4.44 |
Clusters Colours | Top Trending Terms | Indicative Publications | Clusters Name |
---|---|---|---|
Red | Tourism, gentrification, lifestyle migration, urbanization, migrants, political ecology, geographies, transnationalism, Latin America, power, privilege, landscape, Cuenca, residential tourism, retirement migration, south Heritage, overtourism, historic district, Airbnb. | Aguilar et al. [73] Bantman-Masum [65] Cardinal [13] Chen [74] Sigler and Wachsmuth [75] Urquiaga et al. [76] van Noorloos and Steel [67] Cocola-Gant and Lopez-Gay [64] Domínguez-Mujica et al. [77] Hayes [69] Hayes and Zaban [72] Jover and Díaz-Parra [43] López-Gay et al. [78] Navarrete Escobedo [79] Navarrete Escobedo [70] Oscilowicz et al. [80] Sánchez et al. [81] Zaar and da Fonseca [82] Pontes et al. [83] | Age of Lifestyle Migration, Overtourism and Gentrification: Tourism in Transition Through Regeneration |
Green | Second home, mobility, housing, life, Barcelona, city neighbourhood, population, owners, Spain, policy, rural area, areas, Catalonia, Europe, Sweden, immigration, perspectives, urban geography. | Back et al. [84] Sulyok et al. [85] Wu et al. [86] Hoogendoorn and Marjavaara [87] Litvin et al. [88] Marjavaara [89] Marjavaara [68] Rye [90] | Life Between Urban and Rural Areas: Evolving Housing and Policy in Diverse Geographies |
Blue | Counterurbanisation, community, China, 2nd home owners, home, politics, residents, west, consumption, income, village, creation, touristification, rural in-migration. | Åberg and Tondelli [91] Stiman [92] Yan et al. [20] Elmes and Mitchell [93] Öncü et al. [94] Yuan et al. [95] | Counterurbanisation and Community Regeneration: Creating Value through Sustainable Migration |
Yellow | Rural gentrification, amenity migration, displacement, globalization, London, countryside, COVID-19, land-use, natural amenity. | Anguelovski et al. [96] Carrosio et al. [97] Sherman [98] Solana-Solana [63] Tan and Zhou [99] Cortes-Vazquez [100] Donaldson [71] Donaldson [101] Du [102] Finewood [103] Kocabiyik and Loopmans [104] Lorenzen [66] Mansilla [105] Perlik [106] Raia-Hawrylak [107] Roig-Munar [108] Otterstrom and Shumway [109] Rainer [110] | Rural Gentrification and Amenity Migration: Land-Use and Community Transformation |
Purple | Migration, place, amenity, rural tourism, entrepreneurship, culture, creative destruction, creative enhancement. | Chen et al. [111] Emard and Nelson [112] Kors et al. [113] Maldonado-Alcudia [114] Müller [115] Pech et al. [116] | Beyond Displacement: Creative Place-Making and the Cultural Transformation of Rural Areas |
Level/Stage | Precursor/Context | Process | Outcome/Impact |
---|---|---|---|
Micro (Individual) | Purple Cluster | Blue Cluster | Purple Cluster |
Key Themes: Personal motives such as quality-of-life aspirations, amenity-driven choices, and entrepreneurial spirit. | Key Themes: Lifestyle relocation behaviour, adaptation, micro-entrepreneurship, and individual learning/integration. | Key Themes: Individual well-being, fulfilment, and enhanced environmental awareness following relocation. | |
Future Research: Examine how individual pro-environmental values and post-pandemic lifestyle shifts (e.g., remote work) influence relocation decisions and long-term engagement. | Future Research: Investigate the interaction and identity shifts between lifestyle migrants and locals at the individual level. | Future Research: Track how regenerative values and practices spread through informal networks and how they influence broader community behaviours over time. | |
Meso (Community/Destination) | Green Cluster | Red Cluster | Green Cluster |
Key Themes: Local attractiveness; existing amenities, housing market conditions, and policy environment shaping destination appeal. | Key Themes: On-site gentrification dynamics including real estate investment pressures, displacement risks, and socio-spatial restructuring in tourist hotspots. | Key Themes: Community outcomes such as demographic shifts, neighbourhood revitalisation versus displacement, and local entrepreneurial innovations. | |
Future Research: Assess community readiness and planning frameworks to effectively leverage lifestyle migration for sustainable development. | Future Research: Explore how community negotiation and stakeholder collaboration can mediate conflicts and drive inclusive local development. | Future Research: Develop tools and comparative case studies to assess community resilience and regenerative capacity across diverse geographic contexts. | |
Macro (Regional/National/Global) | Red Cluster | Yellow Cluster | Purple Cluster |
Key Themes: Global tourism trends, international capital flows, structural forces, and policy regimes that shape migration and tourism dynamics. | Key Themes: Cross-scale flows, feedback mechanisms, and transnational networks connecting regional migration and tourism; the role of mass mobility and structural inequalities. | Key Themes: Systemic regenerative outcomes including balanced economic development, sustainable practices, and restorative environmental policies. | |
Future Research: Evaluate how macro-level policies and global market forces facilitate or hinder transitions towards regenerative outcomes. | Future Research: Analyse multi-level governance impacts and assess how international policies can mitigate adverse migration-induced pressures. | Future Research: Compare destinations that have successfully integrated regenerative tourism models to identify critical success factors for scalable policy interventions. |
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Nikšić Radić, M.; Dragičević, D. Integrative Review on Tourism Gentrification and Lifestyle Migration: Pathways Towards Regenerative Tourism. Sustainability 2025, 17, 5163. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115163
Nikšić Radić M, Dragičević D. Integrative Review on Tourism Gentrification and Lifestyle Migration: Pathways Towards Regenerative Tourism. Sustainability. 2025; 17(11):5163. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115163
Chicago/Turabian StyleNikšić Radić, Maja, and Daniel Dragičević. 2025. "Integrative Review on Tourism Gentrification and Lifestyle Migration: Pathways Towards Regenerative Tourism" Sustainability 17, no. 11: 5163. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115163
APA StyleNikšić Radić, M., & Dragičević, D. (2025). Integrative Review on Tourism Gentrification and Lifestyle Migration: Pathways Towards Regenerative Tourism. Sustainability, 17(11), 5163. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115163