Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy

The ARC Centre of Excellence in Creative Industries and Innovation (herewith CCI) was established with two simple policy objectives. One was to assess anecdotal and boosterish claims about the growth rates of the creative industries, and hence, to measure the size of the creative industries contribu...

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Main Author: Hearn Greg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2014-06-01
Series:Cultural Science
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.65
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author Hearn Greg
author_facet Hearn Greg
author_sort Hearn Greg
collection DOAJ
description The ARC Centre of Excellence in Creative Industries and Innovation (herewith CCI) was established with two simple policy objectives. One was to assess anecdotal and boosterish claims about the growth rates of the creative industries, and hence, to measure the size of the creative industries contribution to gross domestic product (GDP). The other was to ascertain the contribution of the creative industries to employment. Preliminary research detailed in Cunningham and Higgs (2009) showed that the existing industrial classifications did not incorporate the terminology of the creative industries, nor did they disaggregate new categories of digital work such as video games. However, we discovered that occupational codes provide a much more fine-grained account of work that would enable us to disaggregate and track economic activity that corresponded to creative industries terminology. Thus was born one major centrepiece of CCI research – the tracking of national occupational codes in pursuit of measuring creative industries policy outcomes. This paper commences with some description of empirical work that investigates creative occupations; however, the real point is to suggest that this type of detailed, occupation-based empirical work has important theoretical potential that has not yet been fully expended (though see Cunningham 2013; Hearn and Bridgstock 2014; Bakhshi, Freeman and Higgs 2013; Hartley and Potts 2014).
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spelling doaj-art-6d399d4c5420401c87bc9475429640a12025-02-10T13:26:38ZengSciendoCultural Science1836-04162014-06-0171839710.5334/csci.6565Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economyHearn Greg0Director, Commercial Research and Development, Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, AustraliaThe ARC Centre of Excellence in Creative Industries and Innovation (herewith CCI) was established with two simple policy objectives. One was to assess anecdotal and boosterish claims about the growth rates of the creative industries, and hence, to measure the size of the creative industries contribution to gross domestic product (GDP). The other was to ascertain the contribution of the creative industries to employment. Preliminary research detailed in Cunningham and Higgs (2009) showed that the existing industrial classifications did not incorporate the terminology of the creative industries, nor did they disaggregate new categories of digital work such as video games. However, we discovered that occupational codes provide a much more fine-grained account of work that would enable us to disaggregate and track economic activity that corresponded to creative industries terminology. Thus was born one major centrepiece of CCI research – the tracking of national occupational codes in pursuit of measuring creative industries policy outcomes. This paper commences with some description of empirical work that investigates creative occupations; however, the real point is to suggest that this type of detailed, occupation-based empirical work has important theoretical potential that has not yet been fully expended (though see Cunningham 2013; Hearn and Bridgstock 2014; Bakhshi, Freeman and Higgs 2013; Hartley and Potts 2014).https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.65
spellingShingle Hearn Greg
Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
Cultural Science
title Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
title_full Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
title_fullStr Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
title_full_unstemmed Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
title_short Creative occupations as knowledge practices: Innovation and precarity in the creative economy
title_sort creative occupations as knowledge practices innovation and precarity in the creative economy
url https://doi.org/10.5334/csci.65
work_keys_str_mv AT hearngreg creativeoccupationsasknowledgepracticesinnovationandprecarityinthecreativeeconomy