Search results for "creative class"
showing 10 items of 16 documents
Culture, communication and cooperation: the three Cs for a proactive creative city
2009
The network of European Union creative cities is a powerful new configuration of dynamic, innovative and action-oriented cities, able to transform the space using their network of cultural heritage and activities. From a vision in which the more competitive cities are those able to attract the creative class must go to a vision in which the city becomes generates creativity, presents itself as a powerful incubator of economies based on creativity, culture, research and artistic production. The cities will have to invest in the experience economy, strengthening their identity. The Creative City 3.0, therefore, is an active tension, that requires a long-term vision ability, and calls us to ac…
Getting out of the closet: Scientific authorship of literary fiction and knowledge transfer
2020
Trabajo presentado a la DRUID Society Conference, celebrada en New York (US) del 12 al 14 de junio de 2017.
The creative class: do jobs follow people or do people follow jobs?
2017
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available in Regional Studies, DOI: 10.1080/00343404.2016.1254765 Regional adjustment models are applied to explore causal interaction between two types of people distinguished by educational attainment, and two types of jobs: creative class jobs and other jobs. Data used are for labour market regions in Finland, Norway and Sweden from the 2000s. Creative class jobs follow people with high educational attainment (one way causation), but creative class jobs also follow other jobs and vice versa (circular causation). The results suggest that stimulating creative class job growth could be accomplished through attracting people with higher educatio…
Reasons for Clustering of Creative Industries in Italy and Spain
2012
Creative industries and creative employment tend to concentrate around medium and large cities, forming creative local systems. We follow a multidisciplinary approach, based on cultural and creative economics, evolutionary geography and urban economics, in order to analyse the forces behind the clustering of employment in creative industries in a comparative analysis of Italy and Spain. The results show different patterns of clustering of creative employment in both countries. The historical and cultural endowments, the average size of creative industries, the size of the place, the productive diversity, and the concentration of human capital and creative class have been determined to be co…
Tożsamość i nastawienie do życia młodzieży akademickiej w dobie popkultury
2017
Warunki, w których żyje współczesny człowiek, mają niewątpliwie istotny na niego wpływ. Kultura popularna obecna dzisiaj prawie we wszystkich dziedzinach życia, oddziałując na ludzi, ukształtowała w nich wiele różnych sposobów myślenia o sobie, przeżywania siebie, stylów życia. Krótko mówiąc, stworzyła wiele rodzajów tożsamości. Naukowcy zwracają również uwagę na to, że obecnie żyjący ludzie bardzo często zmieniają swoją tożsamość, dostosowując ją do aktualnej sytuacji życiowej. Wskazują także na powstanie nowej klasy - tak zwanej klasy kreatywnej, czyli ludzi, którzy całkowicie zmienili swoje podejście do życia, traktowania wielu spraw. Rozdział przedstawia ponadto wartości i sposób trakto…
One Size Fits All?
2010
The creative class thesis put forward by Florida [(2002a) The Rise of the Creative Class and How it's transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life (New York: Basic Books)] has in recent years been subject to vivid debate and criticism. This article applies the creative class thesis onto a Nordic context in order to examine whether Florida's theory proves fruitful in a context different from the US. Based on qualitative data, the paper analyses the role of people climate and business climate for the location of the creative class and firms in three different kinds of regions in four Nordic countries. The analyses demonstrate that the people climate tends to be of secondary importa…
Why Study the Spread of Culture-led Development Strategies?
2012
Culture, entertainment and amenities as urban and regional development policies have received much attention over the last decade. In the wake of recent work on the creative class, culture-led development policies have been applied in cities and regions across the Western world. This article uses quantitative data to examine whether these policies have gained the support of Scandinavian local and regional politicians and, if so, why and how. Drawing on policy diffusion and policy transfer theory, the article examines from where politicians are influenced. Can the sources of influence be characterized as (1) horizontal, (2) top-down or (3) bottom-up? The main finding is that the top-down per…
Music Cities. Estrategias para el desarrollo de la economía de la música
2016
El concepto de Music City está adquiriendo relevancia paralelamente al interés sobre el impacto económico de la cultura, especialmente del sector musical comercial, y su creciente importancia en la planificación urbanística. Con la política local y regional postcrisis en el punto de mira, la gestión cultural apoyada en una investigación apropiada posibilita el desarrollo de una estrategia musical que aproveche los recursos creativos e industriales del territorio. Coordinando a las instituciones públicas, la iniciativa privada y la ciudadanía, esta especialización estratégica genera beneficios transversales para la ciudad, aumentando también su atractivo para visitantes y residentes. The con…
Creative city, mobility, and creativity: Finnish artists in Berlin
2019
ABSTRACTCreative city, creativity, and mobility are interconnected. The creative city research focuses on long-term mobility of the creative class members: they ‘move in’ to a creative city. ‘Once ...
Creativity, Culture and Urban Strategies: A Fallacy in Cultural Urban Strategies
2012
Two fields of knowledge have been of special importance for the emergence of culture-led urban planning in Norwegian cities: one concerns the understanding of the potential of culture as an economic driving force in urban regeneration, while the other focuses on the emergence of the concept of the “creative class” and has drawn attention to the importance of competence and creativity in urban development. Despite clear connections between the two fields, it may appear that false connections have been made in regeneration strategies in a number of cities. Based on analyses of the culture-led urban strategy of Kristiansand, a small Norwegian city, these knowledge fields are discussed and it i…