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Invite colleaguesOrange is the new colour of city competitiveness: The role of local governments in promoting cultural and creative industries
Abstract
Cities have the power to stimulate and harness culture, creativity and innovation for local development. Culture and creativity are invaluable assets with untapped potential to deliver spatial, economic and social dividends for both cities and local communities. Building on the Cities, Culture, and Creativity Framework jointly developed by the World Bank and UNESCO and reviewing lessons learned from cities around the world, this paper discusses how local governments can effectively leverage their decision making, convening power and financial resources to enable and support cultural and creative industries (CCIs) to flourish for city competitiveness. Specifically, the paper examines how local governments can foster the enabling environment and channel the support through their core functions and roles of: 1) public procurement; 2) service delivery; 3) regulating public and private space; and 4) facilitating enterprise support and incentives. Through strategic interventions across these domains and collaboration with key stakeholders, local governments can implement measures to address the constraints impeding the development and growth of CCIs and leverage them as a critical driver of sustainable urban development. While the degree of decentralisation of responsibilities, resources and capacities of each local government may differ, global experiences illustrate that the common denominator is visionary leadership that puts in place the policies and catalyses the enabling conditions to attract and nurture CCIs, coupled with the key creativity ingredients — local talent and the uniqueness of the place.
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Author's Biography
Sameh Wahba is Global Director for the World Bank’s Urban, Disaster Risk Management, Resilience and Land Global Practice. He oversees the design and implementation of the World Bank’s strategy, global programmes and partnerships. He has 25 years’ experience in urban development, housing, land, disaster risk management, infrastructure and sustainable development. Sameh holds a PhD and Master’s degree in urban planning from Harvard University and a BSc and MSc in architectural engineering from Cairo University.
Yuna Chun is an urban and knowledge management professional at the World Bank. Her experience spans city strategies and policy analysis and research concerning sustainable urban development, with a particular focus on cultural heritage, tourism and urban biodiversity. She studied cultural landscapes and urban resilience at the Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, holds a MA in world heritage studies from the Brandenburgische Technische Universität and a BSc in commerce from the University of Virginia.