Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement

Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a current global health crisis with dreadful repercussions all over the world. A global economic recession is anticipated, with strong impacts in all economic and social sectors, including the cultural sector. Although all sub sectors will be impacted (herit...

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Main Authors: Christian Ost, Ruba Saleh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-09-01
Series:Built Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-021-00032-y
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spelling doaj-0f860eb4e57b419ea851b244e40919702021-09-05T11:16:26ZengSpringerOpenBuilt Heritage2096-30412662-68022021-09-015111610.1186/s43238-021-00032-yCultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagementChristian Ost0Ruba Saleh1Raymond Lemaire International Conservation Centre, KU Leuven UniversityICHEC Brussels Management SchoolAbstract The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a current global health crisis with dreadful repercussions all over the world. A global economic recession is anticipated, with strong impacts in all economic and social sectors, including the cultural sector. Although all sub sectors will be impacted (heritage sites, theatres, museums, operas, art galleries), the cultural built heritage is particularly at stake, as it relies on multiple stakeholders through a wide range of heritage-related activities (tourism, recreation, housing, real estate, construction, craftsmanship, etc.). Sites management and heritage conservation have not only been vulnerable to strong economic and social disruptions, like most of other cultural fields, but have been greatly challenged because heritage values and the paradigm of conservation (50 years after adoption of the UNESCO convention) are being themselves revisited in the perspective of the Sustainable Development Goals. The paper aims also to consider cultural heritage as part of the Cultural and Creative Sectors (CCS) and how creativity and innovation contribute to post-COVID recoveries through Schumpeter-related creative destruction process. The current crisis might be perceived in a perspective of long wave theory of innovations and economic growth. The economic history is filled with many examples of such transition period when inventions, innovations, and growth reactivate the economic development in an upward long-term trend. In such framework, crisis can trigger innovation and creativity and can be understood as opportunity to increase the CCS resilience and sustainability, as well as harness the universality and the power of creativity. Finally, the paper aims to describe implications of such situation by providing to the CCS ways to learn and experience cultural entrepreneurship, resilient strategies, new sustainable and circular business models applied to the cultural heritage sector and its conservation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-021-00032-yCultural and creative sectors (CCS)Cultural heritageCultural entrepreneurshipLong wave theorySustainable and circular business modelCOVID-19
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Ost
Ruba Saleh
spellingShingle Christian Ost
Ruba Saleh
Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
Built Heritage
Cultural and creative sectors (CCS)
Cultural heritage
Cultural entrepreneurship
Long wave theory
Sustainable and circular business model
COVID-19
author_facet Christian Ost
Ruba Saleh
author_sort Christian Ost
title Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
title_short Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
title_full Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
title_fullStr Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
title_full_unstemmed Cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
title_sort cultural and creative sectors at a crossroad: from a mainstream process towards an active engagement
publisher SpringerOpen
series Built Heritage
issn 2096-3041
2662-6802
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a current global health crisis with dreadful repercussions all over the world. A global economic recession is anticipated, with strong impacts in all economic and social sectors, including the cultural sector. Although all sub sectors will be impacted (heritage sites, theatres, museums, operas, art galleries), the cultural built heritage is particularly at stake, as it relies on multiple stakeholders through a wide range of heritage-related activities (tourism, recreation, housing, real estate, construction, craftsmanship, etc.). Sites management and heritage conservation have not only been vulnerable to strong economic and social disruptions, like most of other cultural fields, but have been greatly challenged because heritage values and the paradigm of conservation (50 years after adoption of the UNESCO convention) are being themselves revisited in the perspective of the Sustainable Development Goals. The paper aims also to consider cultural heritage as part of the Cultural and Creative Sectors (CCS) and how creativity and innovation contribute to post-COVID recoveries through Schumpeter-related creative destruction process. The current crisis might be perceived in a perspective of long wave theory of innovations and economic growth. The economic history is filled with many examples of such transition period when inventions, innovations, and growth reactivate the economic development in an upward long-term trend. In such framework, crisis can trigger innovation and creativity and can be understood as opportunity to increase the CCS resilience and sustainability, as well as harness the universality and the power of creativity. Finally, the paper aims to describe implications of such situation by providing to the CCS ways to learn and experience cultural entrepreneurship, resilient strategies, new sustainable and circular business models applied to the cultural heritage sector and its conservation.
topic Cultural and creative sectors (CCS)
Cultural heritage
Cultural entrepreneurship
Long wave theory
Sustainable and circular business model
COVID-19
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43238-021-00032-y
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