10 research outputs found
Social capital, local communities and culture-led urban regeneration processes: the Sydney Olympic Park experience
Culture has become increasingly important in regeneration processes designed to deal with urban futures. Urban regeneration processes in which culture has played a prominent role range from large-scale public investments in cultural facilities and artefacts as `hallmarks of urban regeneration projects (e.g. Guggenheim Bilbao), through to the use of `one shot cultural events such as the Olympic Games as a catalyst and engine for regenerating urban areas. The aim of this paper is to examine the association between social capital (SC), local communities and the culture-led regeneration process at Sydney Olympic Park (SOP), New South Wales, Australia. The catalyst for the transformation of an industrial wasteland into SOP was the awarding of the Olympics to Sydney in 1993. A convenience sample of 47 professional reports associated with the regeneration process at SOP between 1993 and 2010 were analyzed, the aim being to understand how local communities had been linked to the regeneration process through SC. Results from the analysis identified three principal associations between SC, local communities and the ongoing SOP regeneration process. The first association related to how, during the early years of the regeneration process, SC was used as a means of expressing concern about how governance mechanisms implemented at SOP might adversely impact the ability of local communities to engage in decision making that affected their local environment
Cultural Policies and Local Planning Strategies: What Is the Role of Culture in Local Sustainable Development?
The authors draw a strategic framework for cultural planning at the local level. The concepts of industrial district and cluster have strengthened the role of spaceâin terms of external economies of localization and agglomerationâin economic development. The recent debate concerning contemporary development processes has underlined the increasing role of the cultural dimension for local development and has focused on different paths of clustering around cultural investment. The authors review the latest literature on cultural districts and illustrate some key cases around the postindustrialized world in which culture played a critical role by acting as a catalyst for major economic and social renewal. The authors present a strategic model of a progressive cultural district based on an asset-action matrix that intersects cultural policy drivers with capital resources. The authors define a new model of cultural districtâthe system-wide cultural districtâas an emergent, self-organized model of cultural supply that displays significant strategic complementaries with other production chains with a typical, postindustrial characterization
Power to the people: when culture works as a social catalyst in urban regeneration processes (and when it does not)
This article focuses upon the relationship between culture, urban regeneration schemes, and their impact on socio-cognitive assets â namely, social and human capital. It examines three major urban regeneration projects in the districts of Saint Michel (Montreal, Canada), Auburn (Sydney, Australia) and Bicocca (Milan, Italy), where culture has been invoked as a main transformational driver at the economic and socio-environmental levels, but with different approaches and results. Through comparative analysis, we develop a more general reflection on the social impact of culture-led urban transformation processes, questioning the actual role of cultural initiatives â particularly those related to the creation of new cultural facilities and the programming of big cultural flagship events â and participation as a means to improve the local social milieu. We find that a key role for social efficacy is played by projectsâ capacity to elicit the commitment of residents through inclusive cultural participation, as opposed to instrumental top-down initiatives mainly addressing city and neighbourhood branding and real estate marketing purposes
Culture as an engine of local development processes: System-Wide Cultural Districts. I: Theory
Building on the early works of Alfred Marshall, analyses of local economies have emphasized the spatial function of clusters and industrial districts in terms of external economies of localization and agglomeration. Recent literature has emphasized the importance of culture and the complementarities between culture and local tangible and intangible assets. This paper aims to provide an analytical foundation for these processes with a view to developing tools for policy design, analysis and evaluation. By âsystem-wide cultural districts,â we refer to a new approach to local development where cultural production and participation present significant strategic complementarities with other production chains. In this view, culture drives the accumulation of intangible assets such as human, social, and cultural/symbolic capital, thereby fostering economic and social growth and environmental sustainability
Culture as an engine of local development processes: System-Wide Cultural Districts. II: Prototype Cases
Building upon the companion paper in this issue, this essay analyses five case studies that
can be taken as prototypes of the system-wide cultural district culture-led developmental model. The
research targets five cities in Europe and the U.S.: Valencia, Austin, Newcastle/Gateshead, Linz, and
Denver. Each presents specific characteristics but also some deep, structural common traits. The case
studies are compared and their future viability is evaluated in terms of the factors presented in the
companion piece
Aree urbane, ambiente naturale e benessere. Il caso della cittĂ di Milano
Gli autori portano in evidenza il peso dellâambiente urbano, inteso nella sua dimensione di ecosistema urbano, rispetto alla qualitĂ della vita ed al benessere della popolazione. Lâanalisi viene svolta rispetto ad un campionamento statisticamente significativo realizzato sulla popolazione di Milano nel 2010, nel quale sono stata rilevate alcune delle determinanti che la letteratura indica quali preminenti nella formazione del benessere sociale degli individui, (reddito, genere, consumi culturali, distanza di residenza dalle aree verdi). Le evidenze dimostrano attraverso il ranking delle principali variabili che costruiscono il benessere di una persona, la funzione di ogni possibile determinante registrato, soffermando lâattenzione rispetto al ruolo delle aree verdi nella costruzione di reti relazionali e capitale sociale
Museum environments, visitorsâ behaviour, and well-being: beyond the conventional wisdom
We introduce a taxonomy of museum environments, based upon three dimensions: the auratic/non-auratic character of the environment, visitorsâ cultural attendance, and level of cultural attendance of the social context. We consider a case study of a museum environment characterized by the least favourable socio-cognitive conditions, and conduct a study on 102 museum visitors about their cognitive performance in terms of attention and recall, cultural habits, evaluation of museum services, and psychological well-being. In spite of a fair cognitive performance in terms of attention and recall and a general satisfaction with the museum environment features, a weak relationship between performance and cultural habits, and between cultural habits and psychological well-being, is found. We conclude that museum policies for low-attendance museum environments should be carefully reconsidered in order to stimulate visitors to develop more culturally oriented habits, with possible positive impacts also in terms of well-being
Understanding culture-led local development: A critique of alternative theoretical explanations
In this paper we carry out a meta-analytic review of the literature on culture-led local development
models.We identify and discuss three typical fallacies characterising mono-causal culture-led development
schemes: instrumentalism, over-engineering, and parochialism.We then discuss their analytical
background, and provide examples illustrating the consequences of each. Based upon this
critical discussion, we make a case for a ânew territorial thinkingâ approach that takes into account
the tangled hierarchy of global and local viewpoints that is connatural to spatially situated cultural
production, and focuses upon a non-linear, multi-causal scheme as the only possible framework for
the policy design of credible, socially accountable, culture-led development strategie