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Respectability in women's solo travel: a critical conceptualisation
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Respectability in women's solo travel: a critical conceptualisation

Qiuyi Lyu and Neil Carr
Current issues in tourism
30/04/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50851

Abstract

respectability women solo travel legitimacy morality mobility
This conceptual paper explores how respectability, as a social logic, shapes women's solo travel. It argues that concerns about safety and risk are merely a surface manifestation of a deeper debate about who is a proper traveller. The paper first defines respectability and distinguishes it from legality and legitimacy. It explains how respectability, through everyday carrot and stick mechanisms, transforms social expectations into conditional freedom and internalised self-discipline. The analysis then focuses on how women are interpreted as more or less respectable in solo travel from surface, relational and temporal dimensions. It further reveals how institutions, cultural norms, and digital platforms govern respectability by determining whose presence is more easily identified and trusted. Finally, the paper offers implications for tourism practices and wider society. Overall, it calls for shifting the cost of being read as respectable from individual women to broader support and shared responsibility.
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Published (Version of record) Open Access CC BY V4.0
url
https://doi.org/10.1080/13683500.2026.2665277View
Published (Version of record) Open CC BY V4.0

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