- 136 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Cultural Policy in Ibero-America
About This Book
This book provides a broad overview of the development of Ibero-American cultural policy in an important and innovative way.
This volume brings together specialists in the field, from different nations and disciplines, and provides the keys to understanding the different trajectories and experiences of some significant countries in the area on both sides of the Atlantic; the recent developments in this domain such as urban cultural regeneration policies and cultural development policies; and the dynamics of policy transfers such as cultural diplomacy. The book also contrasts the applicability and the explanatory power of the idea of the family of nations for the analysis of cultural policy with models inspired by the welfare regimes.
This book allows international researchers an overarching view of the peculiarities and the latest achievements in the field of Ibero-American cultural policy. This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of Cultural Policy.
Frequently asked questions
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Citation Information
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction: cultural policies in Ibero-America at the beginning of the XXI century
- 1 Mapping cultural policy in Portugal: From incentives to crisis
- 2 Changing philosophies of action? Argentine's cultural policies in the 21st century
- 3 Brazilian cultural policies during the workers' party governments: challenges for the development of cultural citizenship
- 4 Culture-led urban regeneration policies in the Ibero-American space
- 5 Innovations in cultural policy and development in Latin America
- 6 The reshaping of Ibero-American cultural diplomacy in the beginning of the XXI century: the declining of the Spanish historical hegemony?
- 7 Theorizing cultural diplomacy all the way down: a cosmopolitan constructivist discourse from an Ibero-American perspective
- Index