[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Call for Abstracts - situating the local in global cultural policy
Sat Sep 08 06:35:32 GMT 2018
DEADLINE APPROACHING
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
SPECIAL EDITION OF CULTURAL TRENDS SITUATING THE LOCAL IN GLOBAL
CULTURAL POLICY Due for publication in September 2019
Editors: Victoria Durrer, Abigail Gilmore, Leila Jancovich & David Stevenson
Corresponding Editor: Dr David Stevenson Queen Margaret University,
Edinburgh
(dstevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk)
From the growth of city regions to the calls for more localism, engaging with ‘the local’ has become an increasingly important part of cultural policy rhetoric in many countries. Yet despite apparent recognition that the practices of culture are always situated (and hence local), contemporary cultural policy research tends to privilege the national or international as the primary site at which cultural policy is enacted and thus, can be reformed. For all of its increasing use ‘the local’ remains abstract, seemingly deployed to legitimate activity that is of debatable benefit to the places and practices imagined by its invocation.
In opposition to this arguably token localism, a body of work calls for
greater recognition of the “situated cultural practices [and] internal
logics, histories and structures” of particular places in the study of
cultural policy (Gilmore, 2013, p. 86; see also Durrer, 2017). It draws
on work that considers the ways in which local relationships and
practices of policymaking, convergence, and transference negotiate and
manage national and international policies (e.g. Stevenson et al, 2010;
Wilson & Boyle, 2004; Johanson et al 2014). This work has been
accompanied by growing rhetoric and advocacy for co-production and
citizen-led as well as participatory governance structures (Jancovich,
2015). Attempts to build “adaptive capacity” or resilience among
citizens (Pike, Dawley, & Tomaney, 2010) have adopted approaches from
social learning (Collins & Ison, 2006) and public participation (Brodie,
Cowling, & Nissen, 2009). Many welcome these potentially more democratic
approaches and the possibility of a commons of cultural assets,
infrastructure, resources and knowledge (Ostrom, 1990; Gonzales, 2014;
Murphy & Stewart, 2017)
But questions equally abound about the application and implications of
such approaches. Some caution the weakening of local power and decision
making by replacing governmental policy (either at a local or national
scale) with a neo-liberal governance model, which actively reduces state
responsibilities. It is argued that this approach might perpetuate
uneven distribution of resources and instead places responsibility for
development on already under resourced communities (Davodi & Madanipour,
2015; Mohan & Stokke, 2000). For example, within the UK contradictions
and tensions are demonstrated through an evidenced reduction in the
investment in local culture, despite a professed growing interest in and
recognition of the local (CMS, 2016).
It appears evident that a better understanding of cultural policy at a
local level is imperative to the development of the field. As such, this
special edition of Cultural Trends will focus on better understanding
how local cultural policy is practised and understood across a variety
of locations. We are therefore interested in papers that attempt to
re-situate and position the theories and practices of cultural policy
making in local contexts (as opposed to the pre-dominant focus on
national and international contexts). Proposal for papers may include
empirical research, case studies, and theoretical work in this area,
relating to:
• cultural economies
• the political economy of local cultural practice • place-based
initiatives • local governance structures
• collaborative and cooperative models for ownership and shared
resources for cultural provision
• community-led, citizen-engaged and / or participatory cultural policy
making alternative models for decision-making processes including
deliberative and participatory processes
• financial distribution of cultural investment •
interpretations/definitions of culture in, by, and for policy • the
relationship between the local, the national, and the international •
the relationship between the informal and the institutional •
the relationship between government and governance.
We are keen to receive proposals from as wide a range of locations as
possible and are interested in approaches to cultural practice that
are broad based including, but not limited to: parks, libraries,
heritage, fine visual and performing arts, food, craft, voluntary and /
or amateur arts, film, animation, digital culture, cultural assets:
tangible and intangible (e.g. venues, networks).
Timeline:
• Initial abstracts of between 300 – 500 words should be submitted to
the corresponding editor ((dstevenson /at/ qmu.ac.uk)) by October 1st 2018 -
accompanied with an 80 -100 word author(s) bio
• By the 1st of November, the editors will shortlist a number of the
abstracts and request that their authors write up the full paper
• Full papers (of between 5000 & 6000 words including all references)
should subsequently be submitted for peer review by March 18th 2019
• On the basis of peer review six papers will be selected for inclusion
in the special edition
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please
use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]