Cover of the 2018 edition
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Author | UNESCO |
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Language | English, French, Spanish, Russian, Portuguese, Arabic, Chinese, Indonesian, Vietnamese and German |
Reshaping Cultural Policies (styled as Re|Shaping Cultural Policies) is a report series published by UNESCO which monitors the implementation of the UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions (2005). The 2005 UNESCO Convention encourages its 146 parties to introduce policies for culture within a global context and commitment to protect and promote the diversity of cultural expressions. The second and most recent report (2018) subtitled “Advancing Creativity for Development” follows the first report (2015) with the subtitle “A Decade Promoting the Diversity of Cultural Expressions for Development”.
Primarily, the report series draws on reports of all parties to the Convention submitted every four years in which they present and describe the actions they have taken in order to implement the Convention. These reports are called quadrennial periodic reports (QPRs). In addition, the report series includes the analysis of other both governmental and non-governmental sources. In general, the report investigates how implementing the convention reshapes cultural policies. Additionally, it provides evidence of how the implementation process contributes to attaining the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity for every human being. The report series also analyses trends and issues concerning the creative economy, which currently is worth $2,250 billion and employs 30 million people worldwide.
The report puts forward a set of policy recommendations for the future, addressing the adaptation of cultural policies to rapid change in the digital environment, based on human rights and fundamental freedoms of expression.
“Each Report is not an end-result, but a tool to be used in a long-term process that includes the forging of spaces for policy dialogue, reinforcing stakeholders’ capacities to work together to generate data and information, and advocate for policy innovation both nationally and globally.”
The reports are published in English, French, Spanish, Russian, Portuguese, Arabic, Chinese, Indonesian, Vietnamese and German. UNESCO is the lead institutional author of the Global Report series and coordinates a broader network of independent experts who author chapters.
In line with the Parties’ quadrennial periodic reporting, the series is produced every four years. The first cycle spanned the years 2012-2015 and the second runs from 2016 to 2019. Accordingly, the third publication will take place in December 2021.
Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions (2005)
The 2005 Convention is an international standard setting instrument providing a framework for the governance of culture.
In this context, governance of culture refers to policies and measures
governments establish to regulate, to promote and to protect all forms
of creativity
and artistic expressions. The most recent UNESCO Convention in the
field of culture and ratified by 146 parties, it is the first
international legal tool to encourage governments to invest in
creativity. It frames the formulation and implementation of different
types of legislative, regulatory, institutional and financial
interventions to promote the emergence of dynamic cultural and creative industry sectors around the world.
Within the context of the 2005 Convention, the diversity of cultural expressions ″refers
to the manifold ways in which the cultures of groups and societies find
expression. These expressions are passed on within and among groups and
societies″. Specifically, the Convention understands cultural expressions as all forms of creativity and artistic expressions, such as in cinema/audiovisual arts, design, digital arts, music, performing arts, publishing and the visual arts.
The 2005 Convention was "since its beginnings, permeated by a material
and economic perspective of cultural expressions, focused on the
production and consumption of cultural goods and services, with a view
to promote more balanced exchanges and sustainable development that
takes into account cultural diversity concerns."
The implementation of the 2005 Convention aims to contribute to achieving several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), precisely SDG 4 (Quality Education), SDG 5 (Gender Equality), SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities), SDG 16 (Peace, Justice
and Strong Institutions) and SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals). The
implementation process identifies investing in creativity as a priority
for sustainable development. At the global level, the convention calls for countries to provide financial assistance for creativity through their Official Development Assistance (ODA) by investing in the Convention’s International Fund for Cultural Diversity. Additionally, UNESCO, through the 2005 Convention, offers technical assistance to strengthen human and institutional capacities in developing countries.
Content
The director general of UNESCO, Audrey Azoulay
referring to the UNESCO General Conference's conviction that cultural
activities, goods and services have both an economic and a cultural
nature stated:
″[c]ulture is not a commodity: it carries values and identities, it gives markers to live together in a globalized world. Our role is to encourage, question, collect data, to understand and energize creative channels, to encourage the mobility of artists, to stimulate a rapidly changing sector in the new digital environment″.
Annika Markovic, Ambassador and Permanent Delegate of Sweden to UNESCO, in 2018, claimed that the report is “the
only global document that presents an overview of cultural development
world-wide and monitors state action to protect and promote the
diversity of cultural expressions at all levels.”
The following aspects thematically summarize the core findings
identified by the 2018 report with regard to the implementation of the
2005 UNESCO Convention.
Culture & sustainable development
For the first time, national development plans and strategies integrate culture, mainly of countries in the Global South.
As a result, cities seem to invest more and more in cultural industries
for development. The UN’s 2030 Agenda recognized the role of creativity
in sustainable development in the implementation of the SDGs. However,
the share of development aid spent on culture today is the lowest it has
been in over 10 years.
Cultural expressions in the digital age
According
to the report, digital revenues make up 50% of the recorded music
market, growing almost 18% over the past year due to a sharp increase in
the share of streaming revenues.
The report states that the internet transforms the cultural value
chain into a network platform. E-commerce challenges both culture and
trade policies that intend to promote the diversity of cultural
expressions.
It articulates the urgency to improve data collection on revenues
generated through digital channels in order to design better policies
and negotiate fair trade agreements. The report claims that monitoring
the relationship between large platforms, Big Data, artificial intelligence
and the diversity of cultural expressions is crucial to ensure that a
variety of distribution platforms and providers promote and protect
future artistic creations.
Artistic freedom
As
informed by the report, attacks against artists have increased in the
past years, including in the digital environment where surveillance and
online trolling pose new threats to artistic freedom. In 2016, 430 cases
were reported around the world (compared to 340 in 2015 and 90 in
2014). Musicians are the most threatened group, while authors also often become a target. In 2016, attacks against authors occurred most often in the Asia-Pacific Region (80 cases), the Middle East and North Africa (51 cases) and Europe (47 cases).
The report reveals that meanwhile, there exists an increased awareness
with regard to such threats leading to a larger number of initiatives to
support the social and economic rights of artists, particularly in
African countries. While there exists legal action to affirm the freedom
of expression for artists, other laws addressing terrorism and state
security repress artistic expressions.
Gender equality in cultural and creative industries
The report states that half of the persons working in the cultural
and creative industries are female. However, a gender gap persists
worldwide concerning equal pay, access to funding and prices charged for
creative works. Consequently, women remain under-represented in key
creative roles and are outnumbered in decision-making positions. Women make up only 34% of Ministers for Culture
(compared to 24% in 2005) and only 31% of national arts program
directors. Generally, women are represented in specific cultural fields
such as arts education and training (60%), book publishing and press
(54%), audiovisual and interactive media (26%), as well as design and
creative services (33%).
Mobility of artists and cultural professionals
The report demonstrates that predominantly restrictions in terms of
mobility represent great challenges to persons pursuing careers in the
cultural and creative industries, specifically to those from the Global
South.
It reveals that a holder of a German passport can travel to 176
countries without a visa while a holder of an Afghan passport can only
travel to 24 countries without a visa. As a matter of fact, artists and cultural professionals need to travel to perform, to reach new audiences or to attend a residency
or to engage in networking. The report exposes that travel
restrictions, including difficulties in obtaining visas oftentimes
impedes artists from the Global South to participate in art biennales or film festivals, even when invited to receive an award or to promote their works.
Governance of culture
As
stated in the report, the 2005 Convention provides legitimacy for the
formulation of cultural policies and their adaptation to changing
circumstances and needs. The report underscores that collaborative
governance and multi-stakeholder policy making have progressed, notably
in some developing countries particularly in the creative economy and
cultural education. As a result, parties to the Convention have made
considerable progress in fostering digital arts creation, supporting
creative entrepreneurship, accelerating the modernization of cultural
sectors, promoting distribution and updating copyright legislation.
However, the report also reveals a lack in civil society participation
in policy making. It underlines the urgency for more effort to ensure
the creation of open, transparent and participatory policy processes in
order to involve civil society participation in policy making.
Trade and investment in cultural goods and services
In
accordance with the report, the 2005 Convention formally recognizes
that cultural goods and services not only have important economic value,
but also convey identities, meanings and values.
As a consequence, at least eight bilateral and regional free trade
agreements concluded between 2015 and 2017 have introduced cultural
clauses or list of commitments that promote the objectives and
principles of the 2005 Convention. Despite the lack of the promotion of
the objectives and principles of the 2005 Convention with regard to the
negotiation of mega-regional partnership agreements, some Parties to the
Trans Pacific Partnership (TTP) have succeeded in introducing important cultural reservations to protect and promote the diversity of cultural expressions.
Next steps
The
report’s primary objective is “to provide key actors with better
knowledge on how to support evidence-based policy, and to strengthen
informed, transparent and participatory systems of governance for
culture.” It aims to motivate governments and civil society actors to integrate
findings and recommendations into their national cultural policy and
development strategies and frameworks.
Following the findings presented above, the implementation of the
2005 Convention "introduce[s] a range of different policy strategies
for integrating culture into development processes" and culture is increasingly regarded as "an economic asset in pursuing sustainable development".
Based on its analysis and findings, the Global Report of 2018 suggests
the following road map for the parties to the 2005 Convention. Accordingly, parties could tackle major challenges in the implementation of the 2005 Convention by:
- Streamlining and harmonizing data and information required for national and global monitoring purposes;
- Encouraging research networks and statistical offices around the world to use the Global Report monitoring framework, its core indicators and means of verification as a basis for their data collection and the establishing of statistical baselines;
- Filling existing data gaps identified in the two Global reports referring to key cultural policy areas, such as trade in cultural services, mobility flows, culture in the digital environment, or gender-disaggregated data;
- Raising awareness among policy decision makers for cultural policy reforms;
- Building capacities on policy monitoring;
- Sensitizing the development community with regard to the creative sector's potential not only contributes to the creation of jobs and income, but also catalyzes innovation, permeating traditional development areas such as education and gender equality, and brings about change.
Challenges
Speaking about the visibility of the progress in cultural policies shown by the report series, Bárbara Lovrinić stated that “[u]nfortunately,
where UNESCO is concerned, there is a lack of promotion in the media in
general. In the long term, the report could have a positive impact on
these issues, which would be enhanced if the public were made more aware
of such work.” She also points out that there is "a
risk that many people will not dwell on the 2005 Convention and the
Sustainable Development Goals unless they are already somewhat familiar
with the topic.” With reference to the title of the report series, she concludes that "cultural policy-making is still far from being reshaped, for it takes a serious amount of time to yield valuable results.”