Global Journal of Management and Business Research, F: Real Estate, Event and Tourism Management, Volume 22 Issue 3

complement the wildlife-based tourism in the Serengeti (Serengeti is only two and half hours from Mwanza), Rubondo and Saanane National Parks. In conclusion the study reveals that there is a high need to raise more awareness of sustainable development goals and especially on specific topics to increase more of their understanding and adaptability. For example, it was found that only 44% of the respondents had knowledge of the term inclusive tourism in its broad definition of including people with special needs or impaired. The majority (56%) were confined to the traditional definition which means to include the marginalized community in terms of income and decision-making. Thus, enabling accessibility to tourists’ areas for physically or visually impaired persons or a person who cannot hear or on wheel-chair is often mixed with enabling the marginalized community to access the economic gains of tourism. As a result, the little knowledge of the term “inclusive” might have contributed to how the facilities were designed for service provision. However, it is well understood that special needs vary among customers and sometimes among suppliers. Nevertheless, in the context of the use of the term inclusive tourism, the study did not find any travelers who were not satisfied with the services provided by their suppliers although many visitors traveled alone (33%) and or with friends and relatives (28%). R eferences R éférences R eferencias A Market based Approach of Sustainable and Inclusive Growth of Tourism: A Case Study of Mwanza Tanzania © 2022 Global Journals 51 Global Journal of Management and Business Research Volume XXII Issue III Version I Year 2022 ( ) F 1. Anderson, W. (2013). Leakages in the Tourism Systems: Case of Zanzibar. Tourism Review , 68 (1) 62 – 76. 2. Ashley, C., Boyd, C., & Goodwin, H. (2000). Pro- poor Tourism. 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