17 research outputs found

    Industry briefing: Environmental sustainability in the UK film and TV industries

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    The UK film and television industries are becoming increasingly aware of their large environmental footprint. Recent initiatives (such as albert’s Screen New Deal report) have acknowledged the need for increased sustainability in film and TV. Yet, sustainability initiatives remain predominantly focused on the production phase of film-making. Shifting to adopt circular economy thinking and practices could ensure environmental sustainability is embedded at all stages of the film and TV supply chain. Examples of circular economy initiatives exist in the film and TV ecosystem, but at present there is limited research into the potentials of widespread adoption of circular economy thinking and practices into the UK film and TV industries

    Sustainability, Climate Change, Creative Sector, Storytelling, Public Narratives

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    This discussion paper introduces the Critical Sustainability Stories (CriSS) Tool as a route for increasing creative sector and professional storyteller use of climate science and sustainability research. The framework is designed to grow the reflective and iterative learning capacity of storytellers when exploring climate change and sustainability issues. It supports the production of research rich stories, which translate complex ideas, and explore connected processes and alternate future societal pathways for their audiences. We aim to stimulate debate amongst our peers in the academy and to prompt action to tackle local and global sustainability challenges through storytelling and creative mediums. The discussion first considers the growing climate imaginaries literature and extant discourses on the role of storytelling in communicating climate science and sustainability research. It then emphasizes the potential impact of the creative sector and professional storytellers in informing public narratives on sustainable futures. We then present the Critical Sustainability Stories Tool, which is comprised of key guiding questions within six topics. The CriSS Tool was informed by geographical and cross-disciplinary sustainability literatures and developed through stakeholder engagement and participatory action research

    Digital disruption: Towards a research agenda for sustainability and business in a digital world

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    Businesses and organisations across the world are adopting various digital tools, technologies and infrastructure to support their strategic and operational objectives. The remarkable growth of market leaders, such as Amazon, Uber and Google is indicative of the global impact of digital innovation more broadly. Despite the rise and continued innovation of digital products and services, there is considerable uncertainty over how such innovations tackle sustainability issues at different scales. This is a pertinent point considering the climate emergency and the need to tackle social as well as environmental issues in both the Global North and Global South. In this chapter, we provide a high-level overview of the sustainability impacts associated with digital innovation, and offer a way forward in terms of a research agenda. The chapter is organised into three main parts. First, we define the digital innovations terminology and identify a range of existing business applications for digital technologies. Second, we critically examine the sustainability impacts of digital innovations focusing on questions of resource efficiency and the sharing economy. Third, we identify four promising research themes and propose key research methods
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