Ecotourism and Environment Conservation Journal
Vol. 3 No. 1: (February) 2026

Equity and sustainability in water-based ecotourism: An environmental justice perspective

Nanita, Evio Tanti (Unknown)
Sharma, Ansh (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
28 Feb 2026

Abstract

Background: Water-based ecotourism is increasingly promoted as a pathway for sustainable local development, particularly in environmentally sensitive areas such as karst ecosystems. However, tourism expansion often prioritizes economic growth over ecological responsibility and moral accountability toward non-human nature. This study examines Paisupok Mirror Lake in the Banggai Islands as a case to explore how environmental justice in water-based ecotourism can be reframed through an eco-ethical perspective integrating social, ecological, and economic dimensions. Methods: The research employs a qualitative interpretive approach. It synthesizes secondary data from environmental assessments, policy documents, and previous field reports, complemented by primary insights from prior academic studies on Paisupok’s socio-environmental conditions. The analysis is theoretically grounded in deep ecology and Levinasian ethics of responsibility to reinterpret environmental justice within tourism governance. Findings: The study identifies three interconnected dimensions of environmental justice: distributive justice (equitable access to natural resources), participatory justice (meaningful involvement of local communities in tourism planning), and recognition justice (moral acknowledgment of ecological interdependence). The findings indicate that current tourism practices risk marginalizing ecological integrity unless ethical responsibility is embedded in governance frameworks. Conclusion: Sustainable water-based ecotourism requires a shift from purely economic orientation toward an eco-ethical governance model. Embedding moral responsibility within tourism planning is essential to safeguard the long-term resilience of fragile karst ecosystems and local community well-being. Novelty/Originality of this Article: This study offers a novel conceptual synthesis by integrating deep ecology and environmental justice theory to formulate an Eco-Justice Tourism Framework. It advances ecotourism discourse by repositioning tourism not merely as an economic strategy but as an ethical practice grounded in ecological responsibility and social justice, particularly within developing and ecologically fragile contexts.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ECOTOUR

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Environmental Science Social Sciences

Description

ECOTOUR is dedicated to exploring how ecotourism can support environmental conservation and contribute to sustainable development. The journal aims to publish research that delves into the synergy between ecotourism and conservation, offering insights that help integrate tourism practices with ...