*Apologies for the cross-posting*

 

FINAL CfP RGS-IBG Annual Conference London 28-30th Aug 2013

 

Session Title: Creative industries, creative jobs and creative clusters: An
evolutionary perspective

 

Organisers: 

Su-Hyun Berg (Dept. of Geography, University of Kiel, Germany)

Roberta Comunian (Culture, Media and Creative Industries, King's College
London)

Robert Hassink (Dept. of Geography, University of Kiel, Germany)

 

Call for abstracts

 

During the last decades an increasing interest can be observed among urban
and economic geographers in creative industries, the creative economy,
creative cities, as well as the creative class (Chapain et al. 2012). In
addition to this increasing academic interest, testified by several recent
special issues in journals such as Urban Studies, the Journal of Economic
Geography, Regional Studies and the Creative Industries Journal, also
policy-makers at several spatial levels (urban, regional, national, as well
as supranational) try to find ways how to foster creative industries. Many
studies focused both on the economic functions of creative industries,
mainly in terms of employment, value-added production, and exports, as well
as on their current organizational features. However, evolutionary and
history-informed perspectives are often neglected (Rantisi et al., 2006), as
well as explaining differences in dynamics between different creative
industries in a regional context. Why is it that some creative industries
grow fast in some regions while stagnate in other regions? 

The aim of this session is therefore to shed a more evolutionary and dynamic
light on creative industries in a local and regional context. In a similar
vein as Comunian (2011) recently used complexity theory and complex adaptive
systems to explain the development of creative industries in the North East
of England, this session particularly welcomes abstracts linking theories
used in other fields to shed a new, more dynamic light on creative
industries. One potentially fruitful paradigm to draw on, in this context,
is evolutionary economic geography (Boschma & Frenken 2011). In contrast to
neoclassical theory, this school takes history and geography seriously by
recognizing the importance of place-specific elements and processes to
explain broader spatial patterns of technology evolution. In this session,
therefore, we would like to explore whether notions of evolutionary economic
geography, such as path creation, path dependence and co-evolution, can
contribute to analyzing and explaining the spatial dynamics of creative
industries.

We welcome both empirical, theoretical, as well as policy-related abstracts.
The focus can be on any creative industries, such as publishing and
literature, performing arts, music, film, video and photography,
broadcasting, design, fashion, visual arts, advertising and interactive
media as well as creative jobs. We also welcome abstracts that go beyond the
narrow focus of creative clusters, namely those dealing with creative
cities, the creative economy, as well as creative class in relation to
creative industries. 

Potential questions include:

How do creative industries in cities and regions develop through time?

How can we explain differences in dynamics between creative industries in a
regional economy?

What is the impact of policies at several spatial levels on the dynamics of
creative industries and jobs?

How can individual talents be fosted in the creative industries?

How can firms in creative clusters be fostered?

How does the national institutional context affect the development of
creative industries in cities and regions through?

 

References

 

Chapain, C., Clifton, N., & Comunian, R. (2012) Understanding Creative
Regions: Bridging the Gap between Global Discourses and Regional and
National Contexts. Regional Studies, (ahead-of-print), 1-4.

Comunian, R. (2011) Rethinking the Creative City The Role of Complexity,
Networks and Interactions in the Urban Creative Economy. Urban Studies,
48(6), 1157-1179. 

Boschma, R., & Frenken, K. (2011). The emerging empirics of evolutionary
economic geography. Journal of Economic Geography, 11(2), 295-307. 

Rantisi N M, Leslie D, Christopherson S (2006) Placing the creative economy:
scale, politics, and the material. Environment and Planning A 38(10) 1789 -
1797

 

 

Abstract Submission:

If you would like to contribute to this session, please send your abstract
of not more than 250 words to Su-Hyun Berg (
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]) by Friday,
8th February 2013.

 

 

 

Su-Hyun Berg 

 

M.A. / M.Sc. European Studies

Research Associate

Department of Geography

University of Kiel (CAU), Germany

 

Phone: +49 431 880-4029 

Fax: +49 431 880-5290

E-Mail: [email protected]

http://www.wigeo.uni-kiel.de/

 

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