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Enabling people with impairments to use Airbnb

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:38 authored by Melanie RandleMelanie Randle, Sara Dolnicar
Paid peer-to-peer accommodation networks, including Airbnb, have been accused of excluding people with impairments. This study analyses host and guest posts on the Airbnb hosting community to (1) reveal key barriers preventing people with impairments from fully participating in peer-to-peer accommodation trading, and (2) identify solutions to overcoming these barriers, using as theoretical framework the social model of disability. The key conclusion is that we may be witnessing a fundamental shift in the nature of barriers: as the growing peer-to-peer accommodation sector increases the quantity and variability of accommodation options, the primary challenge is no longer a lack of suitable accommodation (physical barrier), but the identification of suitable accommodation (informational barrier). Informational barriers are potentially easier to overcome.

Funding

Consumer value and disability services: The impact of increased autonomy

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

M. Randle & S. Dolnicar, "Enabling people with impairments to use Airbnb", Annals of Tourism Research 76 (2019) 278-289.

Journal title

Annals of Tourism Research

Volume

76

Pagination

278-289

Language

English

RIS ID

135390

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