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Recreation Substitutability Analysis×Leisure Constraints Negotiation Model×
CampoSport Leisure StudiesSport Leisure Studies
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen19911993
Autor originalBo Shelby & Jerry Vaske; Seppo Iso-AholaEdgar L. Jackson, Duane W. Crawford & Geoffrey Godbey; Julie Hubbard & Roger Mannell
TipoApplied analytic pipeline for recreation substitutionProcess model of constraint encounter, negotiation, and participation
Fuente seminalShelby, B., & Vaske, J. J. (1991). Resource and Activity Substitutes for Recreational Salmon Fishing in New Zealand. Leisure Sciences, 13(1), 21-32. DOI ↗Jackson, E. L., Crawford, D. W., & Godbey, G. (1993). Negotiation of leisure constraints. Leisure Sciences, 15(1), 1-11. DOI ↗
AliasLeisure Substitutability Analysis, Recreation Substitution Assessment, Activity-Resource Substitution Analysis, Substitutability of Leisure BehaviorConstraint Negotiation Model, Negotiation of Leisure Constraints, Constraint-Effects-Mitigation Model
Relacionados43
ResumenRecreation substitutability analysis studies the interchangeability of leisure experiences, asking when and for whom one recreation activity, site, or time can acceptably replace another. Bo Shelby and Jerry Vaske's work, exemplified by their 1991 study of salmon fishing in New Zealand, organized substitution into distinct types, varying the activity, the resource or setting, the timing, or the strategy of participation, and measured anglers' willingness to accept each kind of substitute when their preferred option was unavailable. Seppo Iso-Ahola's 1986 theory framed substitution as a psychological process in which perceived freedom of choice is the critical mediator: people substitute more willingly when they feel they are choosing rather than being forced, and when the alternative shares the valued qualities of the original. The analysis combines a typology of substitution with measures of willingness conditioned on choice freedom, the quality of alternatives, and recreationists' specialization and commitment.The leisure constraints negotiation model studies how people who encounter obstacles to participation do not simply abstain but instead deploy strategies that allow them to take part anyway, often in modified form. Building on Crawford, Jackson and Godbey's tripartite classification of constraints into intrapersonal, interpersonal, and structural types, Jackson, Crawford and Godbey's 1993 paper overturned the prevailing assumption that constraints are insurmountable barriers, arguing instead that participation is the outcome of a negotiation process in which motivation and effort can offset constraint. Hubbard and Mannell's 2001 study formalized this insight by pitting four competing models of the constraint-negotiation process against one another with structural equation modeling, establishing the constraint-effects-mitigation model as the dominant account. The framework reframes non-participation as just one possible endpoint of an active negotiation rather than the inevitable consequence of facing a constraint.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Recreation Substitutability Analysis · Leisure Constraints Negotiation Model. Recuperado el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare