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A Future for the Creative Economy resources

 

During the summer of 2016 three CREATe events took place in which economists working in the areas of culture, media and industrial organization were invited to exchange views on the transformative impact of digitization and the internet on the creative economy and to reflect on the implications of emerging trends for the future of the creative economy and for copyright. One of these events was jointly sponsored by the Association for Cultural Economics International (ACEI) at their conference at the University of Valladolid, Spain and a second was jointly sponsored with the Society for Economic Research on Copyright Issues (SERCI) at their conference at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, Chicago, USA in July. The third event was part of the CREATe Festival held in London at the Royal Society of Arts in June.

Panel Discussion video

CREATe jointly sponsored a panel discussion A Future for the Creative Economy with Association for Cultural Economics International (ACEI) at their conference held at the University of Valladolid in June 2016. Chaired by Ruth Towse, the panel consisted of Franҫoise Benhamou, Marc Bourreau, Christian Handke and Joel Waldfogel. The video of this discussion has been made available by kind permission of the University of Valladolid and ACEI the conference sponsors:

Creative Commons License
Video of ‘A Future for the Creative Economy’ panel session at 19th International Conference on Cultural Economics, 21-24 June 2016 by The University of Valladolid, The Association for Cultural Economics International (ACEI), and CREATe – RCUK Centre for Copyright and New Business Models in the Creative Economy is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at http://www.acei2016.uva.es/event_detail/3433/detail/19th-international-conference-on-cultural-economics.html.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at The University of Valladolid.

Working paper 

2016-14-coverThis CREATe Working paper reports on discussions at three CREATe-sponsored events in which economists working in the areas of culture, media and industrial organization were invited to exchange views on the transformative impact of digitization and the internet on the creative economy and to reflect on the future of cultural production and the implications for copyright. Participants’ contributions have been summarized in this Working paper and the overall conclusions of the three events summarized.

 

 

Ruth Towse’s blogpost highlighting key moments from the events

Click image to read the blogpost.

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