In: Accounting
can you write the reflective journal on the topic permaculture and sustainability.
Ans-
The connections between culture and sustainability have been in the public agenda since the 20th
century. However, whilst global sustainability programmes at international institutional levels are yet
to recognise the role of culture in its sustainability policies, the bid (albeit failed) in the early 2000s
to formally add ‘culture’ to the trilogy of sustainability pillars (economic, social and environmental)
mobilised a new discourse for the reframing of cultural policy narrative, which in turn urged a
reassessment of methods of cultural management reflecting the same concerns among the sector’s
grassroots. The idea of sustainability and culture working together and their envisioned role in
future-proofing society and human development captured the imagination of cultural commentators,
policy makers and practitioners alike, keen to fulfil these principles ‘out there’; in cultural organizations
and events mega and small, in cities and regions, local and global. The papers in this Special Issue
reflect this appeal.
They also echo the semantic journeys and complexities inherent in the concepts of sustainability
and culture and their interface. The definition of sustainability as a paradigm within which to interpret
biological and social interdependencies [
1
] contrasts with more descriptive temporal and spatial
accounts but provides an important clue about the (eco) systemic nature of this concept and its
contingency on the ‘interdependency’ of systems’ elements, which is what might need to be ‘managed’.
The subsequent application of the term to processes of development [
1
] shifted the emphasis from
sustainability to sustainable development, lending a processual connotation, if not tangibility, to the
sustainability discourse. Along similar lines, the application of these concepts to business (as to
many other disciplines), acknowledged its embeddedness, in other words, its interdependencies with
society and the environment and stressed the relevance of the sustainability vision to business (and
therefore) to management, codified in the ‘triple bottom line’ framework [
2
]. Hence, sustainable
(business) management is concerned with attaining, amongst other things, an economically, socially,
and environmentally responsible society and in doing so with engaging in and securing sustainable
development. More specifically, a system can also be seen from an internal, organizational perspective
and the resource-based perspective that is common to sustainability and management, often focusing on
the economic ‘pillar’ and expressing a concern for economic viability, is also studied as an organizational
subset of sustainable management.
Culture is an equally complex and multifaceted term, commonly evoked as the broad and inclusive
arts and culture sector and as ways of life and collective identities. At the height of the international
debate, a decade or so ago, over the value of culture and the (perceived development) value of a
then emergent creative economy (North and South, East and West), it was a matter of time before
the cultural and sustainability policy agendas intersected. Various theories have expounded the
relationship between culture and sustainability and, similarly, sustainable development [1,3-5], though
these invariably postulate the use of culture, its manifestations or their operation, as an instrument,
as a subject of sustainability. Culture in its various expressions resonates on many levels of people’s
everyday lives, which makes it a perfect vehicle for social and economic mobilisation [6]. Less explored
in the extant literature, however, is an-other ontology of culture within the scope of sustainability in
which culture (in any of its dimensions) is assumed to be the object–not the subject–of sustainable
practice. This applies to culture as a way of life as to cultural undertakings, a museum, an art gallery,
a film production company, which like any other concern interact with society and the environment
as producers, consumers, social and economic actors. Still, these ultimately operate in the pursuit of
their inherent cultural, prosocial mission, collectively expressing and transforming society as aesthetic
innovators, as curators of cultural memory, as community engagement cultivators, as hubs and outlets
for cultural and creative expression. On this premise, sustainable cultural management might be aptly
described in terms of the deployment of responsible management practices and policies with the goal
to fulfil these outcomes and, more generally, to sustain a thriving culture.
The concept of sustainability offers a new framework for redesigning cultural policies and
revisiting cultural management methods through a comprehensive approach that encompasses care for
the environment, develops practices for sound management of public resources and brings the concept
of social responsibility to the forefront [7]. This concept requires an innovative approach not only to the
cultural offer and the provision of services in the field of culture, but also to the formation of long-term
relations with interested parties and investments in local communities. Cultural organizations that
introduce innovations in line with the sustainable management concept must constantly improve their
management systems, processes and tools, whilst skillfully managing their relations with various
interest groups. This consequently leads to the provision of value which combines both the economic
and social aspects [8,9].
Given this, the Special Issue on Sustainable Cultural Management fulfils a considerable gap
in the literature, and attempts to illuminate this broad and tricky field in an interesting manner.
The publication consists of fifteen separate articles. The geographical variety of individual cases is one
of the greatest strengths of the publication. Individual articles deal with different aspects of sustainable
cultural management from a variety of countries, including Poland, Czech Republic, Romania, Italy,
Spain, and Taiwan, as well as China and USA. Although the structure of the publication is not a
traditional one, it finds its rationale and contributes to the aim of the overall project. The theoretical
and empirical components of the publications are well balanced and the Special Issue on Sustainable
Cultural Management provides ample and interesting new findings. Well-referenced bibliographic
resources and their own research underpin the contents of the publication.
In the first article, titled Sustainable Management of the Offer of Cultural Institutions in the
Cross-Border Market for Cultural Services—Barriers and Conditions, by using different notions of the
market, a new definition of a cross-border market for cultural services was presented. Authors based
this on the example town divided by a border–Cieszyn (Poland) and ˇCeskýTˇešín (Czech Republic)
indicated by barriers in the town, which made it difficult for the residents to benefit from the cultural
offer that was available on the other side of the border. The results of the authors’ research proved that
despite numerous cross-border Czech–Polish projects carried out by cultural institutions, language,
information, economical, and psychological barriers limited the full implementation and application of
the concept of sustainable cultural management in the town divided by a border.
The second article written by Łukasz Wróblewski and Zdzisława Dacko-Pikiewicz concentrates on
the problems of sustainable consumer behaviour in the market of cultural services in Central European
countries. In this article, most of the attention was devoted to the culture service, customers’ choice of
means of transport used on the way to a cultural event. In the article, it was proven that despite various
legal regulations conducive to sustainable consumption in Poland, the majority of Polish consumers of
cultural services in the analysed area of consumer behaviour still do not follow this concept.
The next article, authored by Pier Luigi Sacco, Guido Ferilli, and Giorgio Tavano Blessi presents a
new conceptual framework to analyze the evolution of the relationship between cultural production
and different forms of economic and social value creation in terms of three alternative socio-technical
regimes that have emerged over time. Authors explain how, with the emergence of the Culture 3.0
regime characterized by novel forms of active cultural participation, the distinction between producers
and users of cultural and creative contents is increasingly blurred, new channels of social and economic
value creation through cultural participation acquire increasing importance. Authors noticed also that,
the Culture 3.0 perspective is finding space in the EU’s strategic thinking on the role of culture in future
policies. However, having to face the urgencies posed by the many economic and social criticalities of
today, there is a constant risk that the EU marginalizes in practice the role of cultural policy rather than
upgrading it to the new level, and that would be a sign that there is still a significant gap in terms of
strategic vision and conceptual awareness of the revolutionary implications of Culture 3.0.
Article four, prepared by Łukasz Wróblewski, Katarzyna Bili ´nska-Reformat, and Mateusz Grzesiak,
focuses on the sustainable activity of cultural service consumers of social media users. The article
presents the results of a survey that was conducted in 2018 on a group of 1021 consumers of cultural
services, who at the same time regularly used social media. The statistical analysis carried out and the
research results obtained proved that the activity of consumers of cultural institutions on the Internet,
and in particular, on social media, stimulated the brand’s awareness/associations with the brand of a
cultural institution and the perception of its quality.
The fifth article, entitled Moving Urban Sculptures towards Sustainability: The Urban Sculpture
Planning System in China, prepared by Zhe Liu, Pieter Uyttenhove, and Xin Zheng, is based on the
review of more than 100 articles, plans, and government documents, and findings obtained from
semi-structured interviews. The article argues that urban planning strategies and policies have been
conceived as strategic instruments by the Chinese municipal governments to realize sustainable
development of urban sculptures. Findings of authors are very valuable, because they would enrich
knowledge on geographic studies of public art planning through the contextualized analysis of a
Chinese urban sculpture planning system.
A further article prepared by Hailing Wang, Libiao Bai, Ning Huang, Qiang Du, and Tingting
Zhang depicts culture as a base in new kind of management from the social aspect, termed as Social
Project Culture (SPC). Authors noticed that SPC can promote sustainable development and improve
the management level and efficiency of organizations by promoting management by project application
across society. In addition, it can reduce the communication barriers in different enterprises and improve
the success rate of cooperation. For managers, SPC can reduce the management difficulties caused
by different cultures, outdated management, and changing environments. For government, it can
indirectly promote the economic development of society by prompting the prosperity of enterprises
and organizations.
Article seven, prepared by Gail Markle, focuses on an understanding, pro-environmental behavior
in the United States. The author using insights from grid-group cultural theory and cognitive sociology,
designed a mixed-methods study, which examined the factors that influenced pro-environmental
behavior among a nationally representative U.S. sample (n=395). Qualitative results indicated that
individuals develop culturally specific environmental socio-cognitive schemas, which they use to assign
meaning to the environment and guide their environmentally significant behavior. Quantitative results
indicate cultural orientation, pro-environmental orientation, environment identity, and environmental
influence predict pro-environmental behavior. According to the opinion of the author, applying
these combined theoretical perspectives to the social problem of environmental degradation could
facilitate the development of targeted strategies for bringing about impactful behavioral change.
This study is significant because synthesizing grid-group cultural theory and cognitive sociology
enables us to better understand obstacles to the individual and collective performance of efficacious
pro-environmental behavior.
The next article, entitled Sustainable Management of Contemporary Art Galleries: A Delphi Survey
for the Spanish Art Market, written by Alicia Mateos-Ronco and Nieves PeiróTorralba, focuses on art
galleries, which are the most influential intermediaries in the Spanish primary contemporary fine-art
market and perform a role that goes beyond the mere distribution of works of art. This paper develops
and applies a prospective methodology based on the information compiled by twenty-five experts to
identify and evaluate the factors that determine the current situation and future outlook for Spanish
contemporary art galleries. The results show, that the survival of these organizations will depend
on their ability to adapt to the changing conditions of the economic environment; reactivating and
internationalizing demand and redirecting their business model towards sustainable management by
implementing appropriate business management models and techniques.
Article nine, titled Filmmaking and Crowdfunding: A Right Match? written by Mina Fanea-Ivanovici,
complements the other parts of the publication in an appropriate manner. In this study, the author raises
the question of identifying alternative financial resources for filmmakers in Romania. The main aim
of the article was to study Romanian filmmakers’ attitudes towards crowdfunding and its perceived
suitability for financing film projects. The author based on the results of the study, argued that
regulating crowdfunding in Romania was a desired and necessary step in its development. Such
regulation does not primarily regard the existing forms of crowdfunding in Romania—reward-based
and donation-based—which can still be used without any intervention. However, regulation would
allow the existence and operation of crowdfunding platforms in the more advanced forms of this
financing instrument: equity-based crowdfunding, lending-based crowdfunding, invoice trading and
hybrid forms.
The tenth article written by Izabela Luiza Pop, Anca Borza, Anuta Buiga, Diana Ighian, and Rita
Toader concentrates on the achieving of cultural sustainability in museums. The main aim of the paper
was to develop econometric models that explained the influence of heritage exposure; environmental
behavior; openness to the public; and effectiveness and performance in collecting, preserving, and
researching the cultural heritage. To achieve this goal authors conducted survey research in 86 Romanian
museums. The findings of the study indicated that museums’ effectiveness and performance, openness
to the public, and heritage exposure have a positive impact on cultural sustainability.
A further article prepared by Yi-De Liu, entitled Event and Sustainable Culture-Led Regeneration:
Lessons from the 2008 European Capital of Culture, Liverpool is based on long-term and multi-faceted data.
The study aimed to contribute to the debate on urban cultural policy and management by answering
two research questions: What are the key success factors for sustainable culture-led regeneration? How
can cities strike a balance between the dilemmas of culture-led regeneration? The author’s research
revealed that incorporating events in a city’s long-term regeneration trajectory, continued support and
enhancement of local cultural processes and structures, and highlighting community involvement and
development were major factors to ensuring the cultural sustainability of the event.
The next study written by Yongchun Yang, Yan Sun, and Weiwei Wang concentrates on the
research on Tibetan folk’s contemporary Tibetan cultural adaptive differences and its influencing
factors. Authors noticed that the Tibetans’ cultural adaptive strategies tended toward integration
of modern and traditional culture in the affective, behavioral, and cognitive dimensions, whose
characteristics were especially represented in the behavioral dimension. This represents a genuinely
useful enrichment of the publication and contributes to its versatile nature as it concerns both functional
and geographical aspects of the culture.
The main purpose of article thirteen written by Jan Suchacek was to analyze and evaluate cultural
and creative industries in Ostrava, the third largest city of the country that at the same time constituted
a typical representative of old industrial urban fabrics in the Czech Republic. In this article special
attention was devoted to the emerging cultural clusters that appeared to be indispensable in terms of
sustainable cultural management. The results of the author’s research indicated that the paths towards
cultural management sustainability could differ substantially from recipes, which were well-proven in
leading developed territories. The author’s analysis confirmed some developmental effects evoked by
the concentration of cultural industries and cultural clusters in Ostrava could be identified, but genuine
qualitative transformation towards a more cultural and sustainable milieu in Ostrava undoubtedly
requires more time.
Article fourteen, titled, The Role of Marketing in Cultural Institutions in the Context of Assumptions
of Sustainable Development Concept—A Polish Case Study, prepared by Magdalena Soboci´nska, was
based on literature studies and the results of empirical and quantitative research that was conducted
on a sample of 451 people managing cultural institutions in Poland. An analysis of research results
showed that consumers of culture were ranked first as recipients of targeted actions conducted by
cultural institutions. An increase in the diversity of cultural offers, including the concept of sustainable
development, emerged as a factor stimulating the development of the culture market, being closely
related to growth of the quality of cultural offer in Poland.
In the final paper, The Sustainable Development of Social Media Contents: An Analysis of
Concrete and Abstract Information on Cultural and Creative Institutions with “Artist” and “Ordinary
People” Positioning, Yulin Chen used social media content discovery technology to analyze 9529 image
posts. The results showed that for abstract themes, for example, art or design, people could be more
easily guided by information with the help of images, which stimulated positive emotions, resulting in
more actual engagement behavior, including posting and sharing.
These constructs are common threads running through (implicitly in cases) this Issue’s articles.
In this context, the papers that follow expose and interrogate a varied range of problematics and critical
questions in the relationship between sustainability and culture and how they intersect, engaging with
them at a variety of levels, from the international to the local, from culture to cultural organizations, from
policy to management. In summary, the presented Special Issue on Sustainable Cultural Management is of
pivotal importance in the field of cultural management, as it reflects both the trans-disciplinary nature
of the field, as well as the spectrum of cultural individuality caused by geographical differentiation.
The publication covers a wide selection of issues related to sustainable cultural management, which
means that it can be recommended to a varied audience. First of all, it can be recommended to
managers experienced in cultural management, where success is measured more by the degree of
mission accomplishment and the social benefits achieved rather than by profit. Another group are the
employees of cultural organizations who want to improve their knowledge about sustainable cultural
management. Our Special Issue can also be recommended to artists, researchers, students, state and
local government employees, founders and patrons of art, and all those who want to understand
the importance of sustainable cultural management. As the editors of this Special Issue, we see this
breadth of research and exploration into sustainable cultural management as its key contribution to
current perspectives in the field.