Leisure constraints and the negotiation of structural relationships: a case study of scuba diving enthusiasts
Jing Chen, Zihan Yu, Ruiyang Ni

TL;DR
This study examines how scuba diving enthusiasts in China manage personal, interpersonal, and structural constraints through different negotiation strategies.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of a structural relationship between leisure constraints and negotiation strategies in scuba diving.
Findings
Cognitive strategies are used for personal and interpersonal constraints.
Behavioral strategies are used for structural constraints.
A structural relationship exists between constraint types and negotiation strategies.
Abstract
Scuba diving has emerged as a popular recreational activity in China over the past two decades, yet academic research on this sport from the perspective of leisure studies remains limited. This study explores the relationship between leisure constraints and constraint negotiation among scuba diving enthusiasts, aiming to fill this research gap. This study employed a mixed-methods approach, combining in- depth interviews with 20 scuba diving enthusiasts and the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) for survey and analysis. The interviews focused on the participants' leisure motivations, the constraints encountered at different stages of their diving careers, and the negotiation strategies they employed. The findings revealed that scuba diving enthusiasts tend to use cognitive negotiation strategies when addressing personal and interpersonal constraints, while predominantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRecreation, Leisure, Wilderness Management · Diverse Aspects of Tourism Research · Adventure Sports and Sensation Seeking
