Conference Paper (unpublished)

Developing Creative Cities

Details

Citation

Champion K (2007) Developing Creative Cities. The Vital City, European Urban Research Association (EURA) 10th Anniversary conference, University of Glasgow, 12.09.2007-14.09.2007. https://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_42038_en.pdf

Abstract
Culture and creativity have been promoted as the panacea to reversing urban decline in the knowledge age. The posited benefits of becoming a creative city cut across many aspects of policy and evidence suggests that unlocking the creative potential may well improve the prospects for successful urban regeneration. Such activity may be cultivated to attract economic gain (in the form of investment, developing the creative industry sector, business start up locations, tourism spend and knowledge workers) and also social cohesion (strengthening identity, civic pride and accommodating cultural diversity). There are some caveats to this approach: the benefits may be overstated and are often hard to measure. There is evidence that unintended consequences of policy in this area can include gentrification, a loss of distinctiveness and pricing out the creative sector pioneers. This paper presents an overview of UK activity, drawing on the approaches undertaken in three main categories of creative industries, public art and events programming.

Keywords
creative cities; public art; creative industries; culture; regeneration; public art; events programming;

StatusUnpublished
Publication date31/12/2007
Publisher URLhttps://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_42038_en.pdf
ConferenceThe Vital City, European Urban Research Association (EURA) 10th Anniversary conference
Conference locationUniversity of Glasgow
Dates

People (1)

Dr Katherine Champion

Dr Katherine Champion

Senior Lecturer, Communications, Media and Culture