THE CULTURAL ECONOMY TODAY
Cultural Economy - Stuart Cunningham, John Banks and Jason
Potts
The Shape of the Field
GLOBALIZATION AND LOCALIZATION
Globalization and the Cultural Economy - David Throsby
A Crisis of Value?
Locating the Cultural Economy - Andy Pratt
The Global Cultural Economy - Daniel Drache and Marc D. Froese
Power, Citizenship and Dissent
Strange Bedfellows - Mira Sundara Rajan
Law and Culture
ACTORS AND FORMS
Free Culture and Creative Commons - Frances Pinter
Cultural Entrepreneurs - Tom Aageson
Producing Cultural Value and Wealth
The Intergovernmental Policy Actors - Yudhishthir Raj Isar
REGIONAL REALITIES
Globalization and the Cultural Economy - Francis B. Nyamnjoh
Africa
Globalization and the Crafts in South Asia - Jasleen Dhamija
East Asia - Michael Keane
the Global-Regional Dynamic
The New Korean Wave of U - Jaz Choi
The Impact of Globalization on the Cultural Industries of Central
Asia - Florent le Duc
European Cultural Systems in Turmoil - Xavier Greffe
Countries in Transition - Kirill Razlogov
Which Way to Go?
Southeastern Europe - Nada Švob-Ðokic, Jaka Primorac and Krešimir
Jurlin
Emergences and Developments
Impact and Responses in Latin America and the Caribbean - Ana Carla
Fonseca Reis and Andrea Davis
The Local Creative Economy in the United States of America -
Margaret Wyszomirski
FIELDS AND GENRES
Spatial Dynamics of Film and Television - Michael Curtin
Anyone For Games? - Toby Miller
Via the New International Division of Labor
Digital Media - Gerard Goggin
Fashion - Sabine Ichikawa
Festivals - Dragan Klaic
Seeking Artistic Distinction in a Crowded Field
The Bahia Carnival - Paulo Miguez
Making Material Cultural Heritage Work - Martha Friel and Walter
Santagata
From Traditional Handicrafts to Soft Industrial Design
Australian Indigenous Art - Mark David Ryan, Michael Keane and
Stuart Cunningham
Local Dreamings, Global Consumption
New York′s Chelsea District - David Halle and Elisabeth Tiso
a ′Global′ and Local Perspective on Contemporary Art
Cultural Economy - Allen J. Scott
Retrospect and Prospect
Helmut K. Anheier, PhD, is President and Dean at the Hertie School
of Governance, and holds a chair of sociology at Heidelberg
University. He received his PhD from Yale University in 1986, was a
senior researcher at John Hopkins School of Public Policy,
Professor of Public Policy and Social Welfare at UCLA′s Luskin
School of Public Affairs, and Centennial Professor at the London
School of Economics. Professor Anheier founded and directed the
Centre for Civil Society at LSE, the Center for Civil Society at
UCLA, and the Center for Social Investment at Heidelberg. Before
embarking on an academic career, he served as social affairs
officer to the United Nations.
He is author of over 400 publications, and won various
international prizes and recognitions for his scholarship. Amongst
his recent book publications are Nonprofit Organizations - Theory,
Management, Policy (London: Routledge, 2014), A Versatile American
Institution: The Changing Ideals and Realities of Philanthropic
Foundations with David Hammack (Washington, DC: Brookings, 2013)
and The Global Studies Encyclopedia with Mark Juergensmeyer (5
vols, Sage, 2012). He is the principal academic lead of the
Hertie School´s annual Governance Report (Oxford University Press,
2013-), and currently working on projects relating to indicator
research, social innovation, and success and failure in
philanthropy. Yudhishthir Raj Isar is an independent analyst,
advisor and public speaker who straddles different worlds of
cultural theory, experience and practice. He is Professor of
Cultural Policy Studies at The American University of Paris and
Adjunct Professor at the Institute for Culture and Society,
University of Western Sydney. He has also been maître de conference
at Sciences Po, Paris. Professor Isar is co-editor of the Cultures
and Globalization Series (SAGE). He is a trustee of civil society
cultural organisations and consultant to international
organisations and foundations and Past President of Culture Action
Europe. Earlier, at UNESCO, where he served from 1973 to 2002, he
was notably Executive Secretary of the World Commission on Culture
and Development and Director of the International Fund for the
Promotion of Culture.
The notions of ′creative industry′ and ′creative economy′ have
become ever more insistent in contemporary cultural, economic and
urbanistic debates. Provoking vociferous opposition as well as
overblown hyperbole the questions raised by these ideas can no
longer be side-stepped or dismissed. This extremely rich book
surveys the full range of the creative economy, from ethnic-based
craftspeople to digital second lifers, and includes Africa and Asia
alongside the heartlands of USA and Europe. In so doing it tackles
some fundamental questions head-on. It gives full voice to those
anxious about global homogenisation and those powerfully critical
of the monopolisation and concentration of ownership and control by
the mega-corporations. But as the key introductory and concluding
chapters make clear, it is simply not possible any longer to ignore
the enormous transformational power of the creative economy. We
have to both understand the new cultural and economic landscape in
which we live and to avoid the blanket condemnations of those who
would argue that this global creative economy is inimical to
meaningful culture. In this book we find the tools to help achieve
both of these
Professor Justin O′Connor
School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds
This catholic volume has succeeded admirably in drawing together a
range of leading academics and renowned artists, cultural
activists, and consultants to interrogate a series of critical
questions about the cultural economy. Drawing from diverse
disciplinary and theoretical positions, questions such as whether
and how the cultural economy is becoming more globalized, the
relationship between commodification and aesthetics, national and
transnational patterns of investment, production, distribution and
consumption of cultural goods and services, and the policy
implications of these various trends, have been critically
explored. These diversities of questions, perspectives and authors
have been matched by an equally impressive geo-cultural
coverage
Lily Kong
Professor of Geography, National University of Singapore In the age
of globalization we are no longer home alone. Migration brings
other worlds into our own just as the global reach of the media
transmits our world into the hearts and minds of others. Often
incommensurate values are crammed together in the same public
square. Increasingly we all today live in the kind of ′edge
cultures′ we used to see only on the frontiers of civilizations in
places like Hong Kong or Istanbul. The resulting frictions and
fusions are shaping the soul of the coming world order. I can think
of no other project with the ambitious scope of defining this
emergent reality than "The Cultures and Globalization Project". I
can think of no more capable minds than Raj Isar and Helmut Anheier
who can pull it off
Nathan Gardels
Editor-in-Chief, NPQ, Global Services, Los Angeles Times
Syndicate/Tribune Media This series represents an innovative
approach to the central issues of globalization, that phenomenon of
such undefined contours. This volume relates these to the cultural
and creative industries in a wide range of powerful analytical
perspectives
Lupwishi Mbuyumba
Director of the Observatory of Cultural Policies in Africa A
"strong editorial hand" is implemented throughout the book to
create a unified volume which transcends a mere collection of
diverse papers....The book provides a good presentation of our
contemporary global socio-cultural and theoretical pluralism..a
long lasting source of information
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