Record Identifier: | 16725 |
ISBN: | 9781349951116)hardback( |
Subject: | Interdisciplinary research |
Subject: | Interdisciplinary research-Economic aspects |
Subject: | Interdisciplinary research-Methodology |
Subject: | Creative thinking-Economic aspects--Research |
Subject: | Interdisciplinary research.-fast--)OCoLC(fst00976131 |
Publisher: | London,Palgrave, Macmillan,2017 |
Sub Title: | creative collaborations in arts and humanities research |
Title: | Cultural policy, innovation and the creative economy |
Publish place: | London |
Publisher: | Palgrave, Macmillan |
Publish Date: | 2017 |
This book develops important new insights into the conditions that enable effective collaborations between arts and humanities researchers and SMEs in the creative economy. Drawing on the work of Creativeworks London, an AHRC-funded Knowledge Exchange Hub for the Creative Economy, this is an in-depth study of how co-created and collaborative research projects work on the ground and will be of immense value to all these audiences. Chapters by researchers and practitioners examine a range of collaborative research projects supported by Creativeworks London's vouchers, which cover a large number of creative industry sectors and academic disciplines. The book identifies key learning from these projects that has wider relevance for academics, funders, policy makers, and SMEs in the creative economy. Morag Shiach is Professor of Cultural history at Queen Mary University of London, UK, where she is also Director of Creativeworks London and Vice-Principal for Humanities and Social Sciences. Her publications include Modernism, Labour and Selfhood in British Literature and Culture; Feminism and Cultural Studies; Haelaene Cixous: A Politics of Writing; and Discourse on Popular Culture. Dr. Virani obtained his PhD from King's College London, UK. He is a full time researcher for Creativeworks London research project at Queen Mary University of London, UK. His research interests include the role of knowledge in the cultural economy, artistic knowledge within locally bounded artistic communities, and new work spaces in the creative and cultural economy.