Cultural Industries In The Development Policies Of Cities And Regions: A New Area Of Educationin Spatial Management (original) (raw)

Cultural Industries in The Development Policies of Towns and Regions: A New Area of Education in Spatial Management

This paper seeks to present organisational and programme assumptions of a new field of postgraduate studies called Cultural industries in the development policies of cities and regions, prepared by a team of workers of the Institute of Socio-Economic Geography and Spatial Management of Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań as a didactic innovation based on a modular system of education that meets contemporary changes in the labour market. The analysis will also embrace experiences following from the educational process implemented under the Human Capital Operational Programme in the years 2013-2015 (Priority IV: Tertiary Education and Science, Measure 4.3: Enhancing the didactic potential of universities in areas of key importance for the Europe 2020 Strategy). They provide a basis for conclusions and recommendations for higher schools interested in the development of this area of education.

Managing urban and regional development through European Capital of Culture programme and creative industries

European Capital of Culture is a thriving cultural programme of the European Union, with benefits for the cultural life of cities and regions and also for the economic development of some of the titleholders. Development of cultural and creative sector – cultural and creative industries – is an integral part of the economic development of cities who decide to run for the European Capital of Culture title. (Cultural) tourism and the overall economy of the region are also developed directly through the project. In 2020, for the first time in history of the project, one city from the Republic of Croatia will hold the European Capital of Culture title. This is a great opportunity for Osijek as a regional center – there is a possibility of redefining and reprogramming city development strategies and the possibility of a new positioning within the European Union. The paper provides an overview of the connections of the European Capital of Culture and urban and regional development through the growth of the cultural and creative sector, and also brings a draft of a successful development strategy for Osijek and the region in the context of this programme. The purpose of the survey is to identify trends in the development of the creative sector within the European Capital of Culture, and the attempt to forecast what would be the positive effects of the programme on Osijek. It provides an overview of the possible directions of development in the city's independent candidacy, regional and macro-regional candidacy (Osijek - Eastern Croatian – Pannonian candidacy).

The Educating City as a Cultural and Creative Industry

Tort, I.; Yusim, I. & Huerta, R. (2019). The Educating City as a Cultural and Creative Industry, World Heritage and Legacy. , 2019

The research addresses the knowledge of the city as a Cultural and Creative Industry to promote heritage education. The training on this typology from an integrative and multidisciplinary perspective will allow us to understand its social, material and immaterial dimension. The city represents a patrimonial element whose scale of study of the territory, as a cultural landscape, allows us to analyze its impact on the global economy, tourism, local development and cultural diversity. All these elements of analysis can be grouped into the global concept of Cultural and Creative Industries, evaluating the various axes of development through a cross-sectional view. The educating cities are composed of various elements or nodes that are summarized in tangible and intangible goods. The material components turn out to be infrastructures, buildings and formal and non-formal institutions, whose educational work must intentionally intervene in the planning of the cultural management of the urban matrix, collaborating in the active design of a city through its heritage experience. Cultural diversity is a reality in today's cities, so the educating city should be nourished by this variety of cultures to develop a new local idiosyncrasy, achieving a balance and harmony between the diversity and the particular identity of each of its inhabitants. Therefore, if we consider the Cultural and Creative Industries as an important factor in the new conception of the economy of culture and the educating cities as a fundamental sector of the CCI, we turn, therefore, the cities into a strategic element for productive development, assuming a new economic scheme, alternative to the traditional, which is based on social cohesion, cultural diversity, information technologies and knowledge and the value of culture. Therefore, the present study aims to analyze a new urban design scheme conditioned by the respect and conservation of cultural heritage, the characteristics of Cultural and Creative Industries and the impact that this relationship can have on the future of cities. Therefore, a transversal and multidisciplinary work scheme is proposed that analyzes the architectural, cultural, social and economic characteristics of the regions, in order to coexist in a city that guarantees inclusion and identity among its citizens as an axis of sustainable development.

Managing Urban and Regional Development Through European Capital of Culture Programme and Creative Industries with Application on the City of Osijek

Economy of eastern Croatia – yesterday, today, tommorow, 2014

European Capital of Culture is a thriving cultural programme of the European Union, with benefits for the cultural life of cities and regions and also for the economic development of some of the titleholders. Development of cultural and creative sector – cultural and creative industries – is an integral part of the economic development of cities who decide to run for the European Capital of Culture title. (Cultural) tourism and the overall economy of the region are also developed directly through the project. In 2020, for the first time in history of the project, one city from the Republic of Croatia will hold the European Capital of Culture title. This is a great opportunity for Osijek as a regional center – there is a possibility of redefining and reprogramming city development strategies and the possibility of a new positioning within the European Union. The paper provides an overview of the connections of the European Capital of Culture and urban and regional development through...

The role of culture in the regional development process. Sibiu - European Capital of Culture 2007

Debater a Europa, 2015

In the recent years, an increased interest in the use of culture as an instrument of politics and economics has expanded and influenced regional development. This paper aims to highlight the ability of culture to generate wealth for the community, on the one hand, and on the other as a catalyst for sustainable economic recovery by developing innovative and creative sectors based on arts activities. We will, however, single out the city of Sibiu and implicitly the “European Capital of Culture”, city that aims to highlight the richness and diversity of cultures in Europe, the contribution of culture to urban development, the increasing international profile of cities and a better image in the eyes of the inhabitants.http://dx.doi.org/10.14195/1647-6336\_12\_8

COMPARATIVE MULTIDIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE IMPACT OF THE CULTURAL AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES ON THE REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT Student

2009

Given the high contribution of the immaterial economy and intellectual capital (tangible goods) to the economic development, to the social cohesion and inclusion, the current analysis has as main purpose to determine how to quantify the social and economic effects of the cultural and creative industries (CCI) in Romania. According to the initial estimations of the Romanian specialized institutions, the contribution of the cultural and creative industries to the GDP was in 2005 of 5.54% compared to 3.74% in 2002, the dynamics in the added-value of the CCI sector being higher then the average annual rate of GDP increase during 2002-2005. The main characteristics of the social effects that must be highlighted are: the dynamics of the occupied population, the flexibility and mobility constraints, the dimension of the employers, the high level of qualification and creativity (artistic, managerial and technical) of the work force in the field.