dc.description.abstract | While tourism brings employment opportunities to ethnic communities surrounding national parks, striking a
balance between economic development and environmentalcultural preservation is paramount for ensuring longterm sustainability. In 2021, the first mountain cog rail transit project for poverty alleviation and tourism
development started to be built in western China. It will pass through the pilot area of the Giant Panda National
Park, bringing development opportunities and challenges for the local Tibetan community. Based on a ques
tionnaire survey of 395 Tibetan residents in the park vicinity, this study utilizes asymmetrical approach so as to
explore the multifaceted elements shaping benefit-sharing, tourism support and community participation in
tentions. The findings reveal residents’ heightened emphasis on the economic benefits of tourism over envi
ronmental and cultural considerations. This inclination is rooted in the enduring impact of stringent ecological
conservation measures over the past 50 years, significantly constraining regional economic development.
Notably, young females who did not fully benefit from tourism express a high level of support for tourism,
particularly when economic, cultural, and facility benefits align. Paradoxically, higher economic benefits are
associated with lower community participation intentions in tourism decision-making, underscoring that only
low economic benefits trigger such intentions. Active community participation predominantly manifests among
young males, suggesting that residents express participation intentions when their benefit-sharing needs are not
adequately met. This study provides valuable insights into the coordinated development of transportation,
community benefit-sharing, and the preservation of national parks. | vi |