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Yule Heibel's Library tagged creative_cities   View Popular

19 Nov 09

Project on Regional and Industrial Economics - U of MN Humphrey Institute

A listing of recently published and working papers by Ann Markusen, director of the Institute's Project on Regional and Industrial Economics at the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs (U of Minnesota). Her Areas of Expertise are:
Arts, culture and economic development; regional economics and planning; industrial organization; economic development, local, state, regional; industrial and occupational planning; economic impact of high technology, military spending.

Her current research "focuses on occupational approaches to regional development and on artists and cultural activity as regional economic stimulants."

Of special interest: http://www.hhh.umn.edu/projects/prie/aei.html ("The Arts Economy Initiative at the University’s Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs is midstream in a ten-year project on artists, their livelihoods, and their contributions, along with arts organizations and cultural industries, to regional and local economies.")

See also Markusen's bio page: http://www.hhh.umn.edu/people/amarkusen/index.html

www.hhh.umn.edu/...pub.html - Preview

references ann_markusen urbanism arts culture creative_cities resources urban_development

16 Oct 08

CEOs for Cities Blog: "The Big Three Creatives"

Discussion of panel with John Howkins, author of The Creative Economy; Charles Landry, author of The Creative City; and Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class, which took place in Detroit at the Creative Cities Summit.

www.ceosforcities.org/...1926 - Preview

ceos_for_cities creatives creative_cities

  • Although the creative city, the creative economy, and the creative class are fundamentally different concepts, they are all related. Each panelist has clearly been influenced by the work of the others.
  • Creativity is not only slippery, as John said.  It is also risky business.  It “fails” more often than not. And therefore, it’s not easy political business.
  • 6 more annotations...
03 Oct 08

Creative Providence - Frontpage

Portal page for "Creative Providence," billed as "a cultural plan for the City" by Providence Mayor David N. Cicilline. Good looking site, friendly UI, easy to navigate. Could/ should be a model for other cities (wish we'd build something like this for Cultural Capital Victoria...).

Note: somewhat mind-blowing - the City of Providence has its own Department of Art, Culture + Tourism... Wow, I guess they take this stuff seriously!

www.creativeprovidence.org - Preview

providence creative_cities reference

  • The cultural plan will explore the current strengths, weaknesses, challenges, and opportunities for the City's arts, creative, and cultural sector. The focus will be on stimulating economic development, strengthening the creative economy, education, civic engagement, and enhancing the quality of life in the City of Providence. It will better position the City to realize its full potential as a creative center and to deliver on its promise of innovation and change.
  • Providence's cultural planning process and the creation of the plan will be a collaborative effort led by two consulting firms: Craig Dreeszen, a nationally recognized cultural planner, and the staff from Providence-based think tank, New Commons.  Dr. Dreeszen will guide the steering committee and produce the formal cultural plan. Robert Leaver, of New Commons, will design and facilitate the public forums - including a conference, online website, and an operating network  to guide the development of the plan.
  • 1 more annotations...
04 Aug 08

"Trading Places" by Alan Ehrenhalt (The New Republic)

Interesting article (which incidentally puts Vancouver front & centre), blogged by Richard Florida at Creative Class: the subtitle is "the demographic inversion of the American city." It's about how the "inner city" and its "inner city suburbs" are now desirable (and expensive) places to live, creating a 24/7 downtown (desired & theorized early on by Jane Jacobs, eg.), while the less affluent (ok, the poor!) are forced to live on the outskirts (suburbs). This used to be called "gentrification," but Ehrenhalt points out that it's a much more complex process than just that.

Haven't read all the comments to this article, but it starts with some excellent ones -- intelligent observations by readers.

www.tnr.com/...story.html - Preview

cities downtown creative_cities suburbs gentrification trends urbanization urban_renewal demographics

  • In the past three decades, Chicago has undergone changes that are routinely described as gentrification, but are in fact more complicated and more profound than the process that term suggests. A better description would be "demographic inversion." Chicago is gradually coming to resemble a traditional European city--Vienna or Paris in the nineteenth century, or, for that matter, Paris today. The poor and the newcomers are living on the outskirts. The people who live near the center--some of them black or Hispanic but most of them white--are those who can afford to do so.
  • Developments like this rarely occur in one city at a time, and indeed demographic inversion is taking place, albeit more slowly than in Chicago, in metropolitan areas throughout the country. The national press has paid very little attention to it. While we have been focusing on Baghdad and Kabul, our own cities have been changing right in front of us.
  • 3 more annotations...
15 Feb 08

U.S. News and World Report on Who's Your City? (Richard Florida and The Creative Class Exchange)

"Choosing a Place to Live - Why it's as important as picking a spouse" (interview by Bret Schulte with Richard Florida, published in U.S. News and World Report); excerpts: "You have to understand that economic activity isn't spread out. So there's a trade-off we have to make between furthering our career and finding a lifestyle that fits us. (...) If you find a place that fits you, it gives you more energy. People have always been attracted to aesthetics. The other thing is infrastructure. Maybe you like to go outside, or ride your bike. Those things are critically important. What people are saying is they are not going to be fulfilled in a place that just has a good pipe system. They want to live in a place that gives them excitement and energy."

creativeclass.typepad.com/...us-news-and-wor.html - Preview

creative_cities flatness interview richard_florida spikiness

  • The world is not flat, says Richard Florida, contrary to the bestselling book by New York Times writer Thomas Friedman. Florida, author of his own bestselling book, The Rise of the Creative Class,
    and a professor of business and creativity at the University of
    Toronto, argues that while Friedman is correct in saying that
    technology has reshaped the world, it has not created a level playing
    field. With newly accumulated data to back him up, Florida argues in
    his upcoming book Who's Your City? that the world is, in many
    ways, spiky—with population, opportunity, innovation, and money
    increasingly coalescing in metropolitan areas worldwide. That means
    pursuing a career and staying close to family and friends are often at
    odds. Deciding what makes you happy, he argues, must go hand in hand
    with deciding where you want to live.
  • So, in a sense, as you go up the ladder, the world
    got more and more concentrated. Then this idea came to me that the
    world is not flat. It's spiky.
  • 4 more annotations...
31 Dec 07

Most Admired Knowledge City -- MAKCi -- Awards

- the English in this PDF is really difficult to plow through -- you can tell it was written by non-native speakers, who commit all the sins: bureaucratic language overly reliant on passive voice; overburdened sentences that (due to passive voice) avoid having a proper subject; academic pedanticisms, etc. But otherwise possibly a useful reference (maybe). Via CEOs for Cities.

www.worldcapitalinstitute.org/20MAKCi%20Framework_180707.pdf - Preview

creative_cities knowledge_cities makci reference

14 Nov 07

$120 million for culture is money well spent

  • If culture really is a driving force behind the economic development of Montreal, as Premier Jean Charest claimed yesterday, it is about time the city, province and federal government put real money into it.

    The news that Montreal's Quartier des spectacles is to receive $120 million from the three levels of government should be applauded.

  • Montreal has been diligently trying to fashion a cultural identity that will set it apart on the world stage. Such an ambitious plan cannot be accomplished without help from outside.
  • 4 more annotations...
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