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UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS The global view of culture Simon Ellis Head of Science Culture & Communications.

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Presentation on theme: "UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS The global view of culture Simon Ellis Head of Science Culture & Communications."— Presentation transcript:

1 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS The global view of culture Simon Ellis Head of Science Culture & Communications

2 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Economic approaches to culture l Creative industries è Eg Hong Kong Creativity index (but includes measures of social capital from World Values Survey) è IP l Satellite accounts è Convenio Andres Bello, (Chile and Colombia)

3 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS ‘Enhancing’ the economic model l The added value of culture è Identity è Gift giving and in kind contributions è Exchange value l Cultural assets è World heritage sites è Intangible assets

4 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Exchange; a developing country view l An assymetric view of markets and values. Is it ‘a bargain’? è Production for tourists or locals? è your culture or our culture? l How to ensure that cultural industries can be promoted to maximise their contribution to GDP? è Tourism & export or local

5 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS The creative chain

6 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS An emerging model? l Anchored in the international statistical framework; ISIC, ISOC, and CP l Transverse dimensions across all sectors relating to the dynamic creative/cultural process è Education; transmitting cultural values and breaking cultural barriers è Traditional knowledge; ‘authenticity’ and innovation, culture constantly changing è Assets and preservation; which also inspire new forms of content

7 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS How many dimensions? SICs nuanced by occupation and product classifications Arts Visual, fine, performing arts Heritage Natural Cultural Tangible and Intangible Audio- visual Film, video, new media Books & Press Production & Consumption l Employment l Value l Performances l Employment l Value l Employment l Value l No of titles l Employment l Value l No of titles Education l Enrolment l Performances in/by schools l Enrolment l Attendance (visitors, locals) l ICTs in education l School textbooks Traditional knowledge l Craft artisans l Story tellers l Festivals ($, attendance) l Intangible heritage (no of themes) l Biodiversity l Traditional knowledge on the Internet l Audio-visual documentation l Languages in print Archiving & preserving l Document centres l Conservation (jobs, $) l Film archives (volumes) l Libraries (volumes, transactions)

8 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Consumption/participation l Participation = consumption in OECD. In developing countries participants are often performers/producers too. l Well-being = leisure. Leisure does not exist in the developing world l UNESCO convention ‘diversity of expression’ & enjoyment of…

9 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Towards social impact l Goods and production – the basic statistical framework l Consumption – is it symmetrical with production? l Social capital – networks that help inspire production and link consumers with common values l Wellbeing – resulting from shared identity with community and ability/income to consume/produce appropriate cultural expressions

10 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Education; Bougainville, Papua New Guinea l A matrilineal society threatened by è alienation of land from ‘custodians’ è wage-based economy l Post-conflict situation leading to attempts to reinforce traditional values and authority – ‘kastom’ l A national HDR based on è The needs of youth è Basic skills & traditional knowledge l Incorporating traditional culture in education è The arts as the means for learning in ‘oral’ societies è The ‘story teller’ as the traditional educator

11 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Environment & well-being; Bhutan l Limit of 10,000 visitors a year & constitution of 60% forest coverage l Gross National Happiness l Sustainability of environment and local economics l Limited export potential l Limited local demand for potential export goods l Belief that well-being goes beyond GDP

12 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS Crafts & Heritage; Uganda l Cultural assets è Tombs of the Buganda Kings l How to value? è CV techniques è Ranking l Traditional knowledge è Craftsmanship è food and nutrition è dress- è medicine è tools, instruments è ritual music

13 UNESCO INSTITUTE for STATISTICS UIS actions l Update 1986 standard è Take account of internet & globalisation è Include education and developing country perspective as key changes l Encourage countries to survey consumption/participation as well as production l Work on ‘heritage’ as cultural asset


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