ASIAN JOURNAL OF ISLAMIC MANAGEMENT (AJIM)
VOLUME 8 ISSUE 1, 2026

Religious-digital tensions among Muslim Gen Z tourists: Phenomenology of NTB halal tourism

Kurnia, Agus (Unknown)
Sugiyanto, Catur (Unknown)
Purnomo, Boyke Rudy (Unknown)
Kusworo, Hendrie Adji (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
26 May 2026

Abstract

Purpose – This study investigates the religious–digital tensions experienced by Muslim Gen Z tourists in West Nusa Tenggara (NTB), Indonesia, arising from the gap between their expectations of an integrated digital–halal ecosystem and the realities of infrastructure and destination governance. It conceptualizes these tensions as a systemic phenomenon with implications for the Islamic management of halal tourism.Methodology – A qualitative phenomenological approach was employed using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA), combining in-depth interviews with seven participants and a focus group discussion (FGD) with four, totalling eleven Muslim Gen Z tourists selected purposively. Data were analyzed inductively and deductively, supported by member checking, back-translation, and source triangulation. Findings – The analysis reveals six interrelated tension clusters: (1) universal connectivity versus discriminatory signals, (2) cashless ecosystem versus partial payment infrastructure, (3) digital halal certification versus informal trust, (4) comfortable halal accommodation versus rigid formalization, (5) accessible Islamic finance versus limited outreach, and (6) responsive versus fragmented governance. These tensions form a layered compound system across infrastructural, informational, and conceptual–regulatory levels.Implications – The findings offer strategic recommendations for destination managers, Islamic financial institutions, and halal certification bodies to close the implementation gap in NTB's halal tourism, transferable within specified scope conditions to comparable subnational halal-branded destinations worldwide.Originality – This study is among the first to conceptualize halal tourism tensions as a layered compound system through IPA of Muslim Gen Z tourists in a Muslim-majority subnational destination in India. It formally defines digitally compounded halal risk as an extension of Perceived Halal Risk.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

AJIM

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Social Sciences Other

Description

The Asian Journal of Islamic Management (AJIM) is a peer-review journal publishes quality and in-depth analysis on current issues within Asia and Islamic management topics. The journal publishes twice a year every June and December. AJIM welcomes strong and original evidence-based empirical studies ...