Offering the first comprehensive and international work on cultural policy, Toby Miller and George Yudice have produced a landmark work in the emerging field of cultural policy. Rigorous in its field of survey and astute in its critical commentary it enables students to gain a global grounding in cultural policy.
This book places the study of public support for the arts and culture within the prism of public policy making.
Non-technical analysis of how cultural industries contribute to economic growth and the policies required to ensure cultural industries will flourish.
The Routledge Handbook of Global Cultural Policy covers the key perspectives and sets out the contours of the study of cultural policy.
This book will prove a new and valuable resource for all students of cultural policy, cultural administration, and arts management.
How have cultural policies created new occupations and shaped professions? This book explores an often unacknowledged dimension of cultural policy analysis: the professional identity of cultural agents.
David Bell and Kate Oakley survey the major debates emerging in cultural policy research, adopting an approach based on spatial scale to explore cultural policy in cities, nations and internationally.
This book provides a detailed snapshot of cultural policies in China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan.
This is the first book to examine whether France’s ongoing defence of the cultural exception as a means to maintain cultural policies and defend cultural diversity is justifiable in the digital age.
After receiving her Ph.D. in Government from Cornell University , she taught at Dickinson College , Rutgers University , and Cornell University's Washington Program . Former Director of the Graduate Public Policy Program at Georgetown ...
This book examines the relationship of audience development to cultural policy and offers a ground-breaking perspective on how the practice of audience development is connected to ideas of democratic access to culture.