Funding Program: European Commission H2020 Program
Duration: 2019-2022
Main researchers:
- Montserrat Pareja-Eastaway
- Robert Kloosterman (International coordinator)
Researchers:
- Marc Pradel
- Arturo Rodríguez Morató
Partners:
- Universitaat van Amsterdam, Netherlands
- City University of London, United Kingdom
- Universita degli studi Aldo Moro, Italy
- Stockholm Universitet, Sweden
- SWPS Uniwersytet Humanistycznospoleczny, Poland
- Universitat Wien, Austria
- KEA European Affairs
- Fondatsiya Observatortiya po ikonomika na kulturata, Bulgary
Summary:
Creative Industries Cultural Economy pROduction NEtwork (CICERONE) provides policymakers with a unique and innovative perspective from which to understand the cultural and creative industries (CCIs). Previous analyses have mapped the location and distribution of the CCIs; CICERONE innovates by exploring the flows of products and ideas that generate the economic and cultural values in and of places, and which also account for the disparities between them. Moreover, CICERONE explores the evolving relationships between cultural and the economy. Place is central to this project; place as co-produced by networks: jobs, ideas, cultures and economies all come together in unique combinations in places, this is what makes them ‘unique’. The variations in local capacities to respond to global forces determine the past, present and future of all territories. By using the global production network (GPN) approach we develop a comprehensive understanding of CCIs (in the form of industries, clusters and networks). Furthermore, CICERONE will translate this new research into a stakeholder network, and an observatory, whose designs are reflective of the network approach. These will themselves be part of European capacity building which will serve to strengthen CCIs’ collective representation, empower sustainable co-creation, and spur local cultural resilience, jobs and economic activity. At its core, CICERONE provides an academic analysis harnessed to economic, cultural and social impacts in terms of local capacity building in, and across, places; as well as deepening our understanding of the inequalities and lack of diversity of social characteristic and economic employment opportunities that characterises the CCIs.