Arts Policy Research for the Next Twenty-Five Years: A Trajectory after Patrons Despite Themselves

Posted: 29 Sep 2008

See all articles by Michael O'Hare

Michael O'Hare

University of California, Berkeley - The Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy

Date Written: August 9, 2008

Abstract

This paper was commissioned for a plenary session at the Association for Cultural Economics International 2008 Research Conference recognizing the 25th anniversary of the publication of Patrons Despite Themselves: Taxpayers and Arts Policy. It proposes five "big questions" to which arts policy research should attend if carried on in the spirit that animated the book, namely that arts policy should seek to generate "more, better, engagement by more people with better art." The five issues are: * Waste of cultural resources represented by works that are not heard or seen, such as unperformed music and works in reserve collections of museums. * Design and implementation of a workable business model for works in digital form (recordings, video, text, etc.). * Increasing the value created by amateur participation (in contrast to passive consumption of art provided by professionals). * Withdrawal of elites, especially economic elites, from their historic participation in arts governance and support. * Fragmentation of collective patrimony as people have fewer and fewer works commonly experienced and art serves niche markets.

Suggested Citation

O'Hare, Michael, Arts Policy Research for the Next Twenty-Five Years: A Trajectory after Patrons Despite Themselves (August 9, 2008). Journal of Cultural Economics, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1273710

Michael O'Hare (Contact Author)

University of California, Berkeley - The Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy ( email )

2607 Hearst Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94720-7320
United States

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