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OverviewThis book gathers evidence and case studies from various parts of Europe and across the different sectors that comprise the creative industries, including the visual and performing arts, popular music, the platform economy, and film. The creative economy has been lauded by national and regional governments for its job-creating potential, even though the jobs created might be insecure or poorly paid. This edited collection emerges from a research network examining this contradiction. It gathers empirical material and case studies across European creative sectors to explore how creative work is perceived by both workers and policymakers, and how these understandings shape practical worker support. The volume brings together renowned European experts from cultural sociology, cultural studies, and creative labour research. Combining cross-national writing teams with focused national case studies, it provides comprehensive insights into diverse creative economies across Europe. Addressing the tension between the creative economy's promise and workers' lived experiences, it examines how cultural and economic policies intersect with social inequalities, determining who can access and thrive in creative careers. The research reveals both the challenges facing creative workers and emerging strategies for creating more equitable opportunities. Through analysis of macro-level policy frameworks alongside micro-level worker experiences, this book offers nuanced perspectives and examines the structural factors that shape the conditions of creative work. With insights from renowned European experts, Creative and Cultural Work in Europe will be of value to those studying and researching cultural policy, labour studies, and the creative industries more broadly. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bård Kleppe , Jaka Primorac , Miikka Pyykkönen , David WrightPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge ISBN: 9781032978130ISBN 10: 1032978139 Pages: 310 Publication Date: 25 March 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of Contents1. Introduction: Approaching Creative and Cultural Work in Europe 2. Measuring Matters: Mapping Creative and Cultural Work in Europe 3. Creativity, and the ‘Work’ of Art: Visual Artists’ Perspectives. 4. Pluriverses of Creative Work: Exploring effects of COVID-19 pandemic on cultural workers in SEE 5. Income and Gender Differences in Creative Work 6. Patterns in Artistic Careers: Embracing uncertainty or navigating interplay between contexts 7. “Oh my God! What have I done all day?”: Challenges of Measuring the Value of Creative Work 8. Creation Factories: Improving the Support to Creative Work through an Innovative Cultural Policy 9. Welfare Policy as Cultural Policy in the UK: From Enterprise Allowance to Universal Credit 10. Building Creative Careers Through Working Relations 11. From Precarity to Security? How Cultural Policies Can Tackle the Challenging Working Conditions of the Creative Self-Employees in Europe? 12. Trajectory of Film Work as Precarious Project Work: From Organisations of Associated Labour, through Semi-permanent Workgroups to Gig Jobs 13. The creative middle class: Between neoliberalism and commonism 14. How to Move Things with Unions? Labour Organising of Art Workers in Post-Yugoslav Context 15. Creative Labour as Platform Work: Structural Inequalities and Digital Peripheries 16. Universal Basic Income and the Future of (Creative) Work. 17. Ecologically Sustainable Creative Work? 18. Navigating Boundaries: Challenges and Impacts of Migrants’ Creative Work in Europe 19. Conclusion: Supporting Creative and Cultural Work in EuropeReviews“This book takes a multidisciplinary social science view on creative and cultural work and workers, highlighting the many policy domains that boundary-spanning cultural and creative professionals encounter, lays bare hard data on working conditions, and calls for progressive policies beyond praise of creativity as the future of Europe.” Katja Lindqvist, Department of Service Studies, Lund University ""Comparative perspectives on the cultural and creative sectors are a crucial missing piece of the research field. This important new collection addresses that absence, giving significant insight into the challenges and the possibilities of cross-national cultural research. Focused on Europe, but with globally relevant insights, the book shows how the problems of creative work are not inevitable, and how another Europe is possible through art, culture and creative labour."" Dave O'Brien, Professor of Cultural and Creative Industries, University of Manchester Author InformationBård Kleppe works as a research professor at the Telemark Research Institute. He has conducted several research projects on cultural policy, artists' working conditions, and the creative sector. Jaka Primorac works as a scientific advisor at the Institute for Development and International Relations (IRMO), Zagreb, with research interests in the field of cultural and creative industries, cultural labour, cultural policy and digital culture. Miikka Pyykkönen is Professor of Cultural Policy in the Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of Jyväskylä. He specializes in cultural policy, creative economy, and ethnopolitics, but his research interests also cover entrepreneurship, cultural participation of youth, government and governance, and social theory. David Wright is an associate professor in the Centre for Cultural and Media Policy Studies at the University of Warwick, where he teaches and researches cultural policy and cultural work. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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