This article focuses on greening cultural policy within a sustainable
development context. We examine shortcomings of major public-policy
responses to the ecological crisis, linking this to the ambivalent philosophical
heritage of anthropocentric worldviews that underpin ideas about the
relation of culture to non-human nature. This ambivalence is reflected by weak
environmentalism in the cultural policy arena, exemplified by surprisingly
non-green cultural platforms espoused by green political parties. Green
thinking is further hampered by the widespread adoption of digitisation
within cultural organizations, which we contextualise in the broader political
economy of digital capitalism and the attendant myth that high-tech culture
is a low emissions business. Green cultural policy necessitates intensive selfexamination of cultural institutions’ environmental impact, at the same time
these institutions deploy art, education, entertainment, sports, and news
to raise awareness of ecological crisis and alternative models of economic
activity. We cite the efforts of activist artists’ resistance against fossil fuel
corporations’ sponsorship of arts and cultural organizations as a welcome
provocation for greening cultural policy within cultural organizations and
green political parties alike.
History
School
Loughborough University London
Published in
International Journal of Cultural Policy
Volume
23
Issue
2
Pages
174 - 185
Citation
MAXWELL, R. and MILLER, T., 2017. Greening cultural policy. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 23(2), pp. 174 - 185.
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