Resumen:
Currently there are 1200 million people worldwide living in extreme
poverty. For these circumstances, tourism has seen as an opportunity
to alleviate poverty in rural communities. There are many features of
tourism as an economic activity that makes it particularly interesting
for low-income countries and disadvantaged communities that people
inhabit; thus, the objective of this study was to analyze through the
review of national and global case study reports, if tourism impacts in
reducing poverty in rural communities where the activity occurs.
Among the main findings, which are consistent with the approaches of
Gascon (2011), is that the focus of tourism benefits a small group of
the community, the rest gets marginal income that does not allow
them to think of tourism as an option to improve their conditions,
seeing migration as a more profitable opportunity. Thus, the approach
pro-poor tourism (PPT) did not fight for equality, and may even
represent problems for a portion of the population, as poverty and
marginalization depends less on the amount of income earned but on
the position of the individual within the social structure. As noted by
theorists of "social exclusion", a person or social group may own or
have access to the means to survive, but being marginalized in the
fields of political, cultural and economic decision.