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The Concept Rollout The Concept Rollout
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A Very UnBritish Coup A Very UnBritish Coup
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Europa, Europa Europa, Europa
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The Great American Bootstrap The Great American Bootstrap
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Good Jobs, Bad Jobs Good Jobs, Bad Jobs
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The Cross-Class Challenge The Cross-Class Challenge
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1 The Mercurial Career of Creative Industries Policymaking in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and the United States
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Published:April 2009
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Abstract
This chapter provides a comparative analysis of creative industries policymaking in the United Kingdom, the European Union, and the United States. Creative industries policymaking is an increasingly favored development strategy for cities and national economies, both in the developed and developing world. As managers struggle to retain a competitive edge in the global economy, they look more and more toward creative workers to generate value for a city, region, and nation. Once marginal on the landscape of production, it is artists, designers, and other creatives who are becoming the new model workers—self-directed, entrepreneurial, accustomed to precarious, nonstandard employment, and attuned to producing career hits. The proven ability of “creative clusters” and mega-events to boost land value is a key factor in the state's attention to this sector of cognitive labor.
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