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INSIGHTS FROM HELSINKI: KING’S COLLEGE REFLECT ON ANNUAL SUMMIT

BLOG: BY DR JONATHAN GROSS & DR LUCY McFADZEAN

Dr Jonathan Gross and Dr Lucy McFadzean from King’s College London reflect on World Cities Culture Forum Summit 2022 and our new research collaboration investigating the role of cultural policy in post-COVID urban futures.

In October of last year, we visited Helsinki for the annual summit of the World Cities Culture Forum a network of cultural leaders and policymakers from 40 cities across the world. We were there as part of Creative Recovery: The Role of Cultural Policy in Shaping Post-COVID Urban Futures – a project in collaboration with World Cities Culture Forum, involving King’s researchers from the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries (CMCI), the Department of Geography, and the Policy Institute.

COVID-19 has derailed many expectations of what the future will look like, particularly in cities. Commuting patterns have changed, many businesses have struggled, and inequalities have increased. Creative Recovery explores the role of art and culture in post-COVID cities, and in helping urban centres to ‘build back better’. We know that art and culture play crucial roles in urban life. But their role in a post-pandemic world remains uncertain. This research seeks to understand the role of cultural policy, specifically, within ongoing processes of urban recovery, and in helping to shape post-COVID urban futures.

At the Summit, we met with senior leaders and city delegates of the World Cities Culture Forum, and discussed urgent questions of urban recovery, post-COVID cities and cultural futures. We hosted two focus groups, hearing from cities about their pandemic responses, challenges faced, and the changing role of culture in urban areas following the outbreak of COVID.

“We explored the role of cultural policy, in helping to shape post-COVID urban futures.”

DR JONATHAN GROSS & DR LUCY McFADZEAN

We were able to attend discussions involving city leaders and policymakers on a wide variety of topics. This included, how to support the creative workforce, who gets to imagine the future, and how research can best support urban cultural policymaking. Delegates were warmly welcomed by the City of Helsinki throughout the Summit. This included showcases of some of the city’s culture – such as performances by Susanna Leinonen Company and violinist Pekka Kuusisto, and visits to Lapinlahden Lähde Centre for Culture and Wellbeingand the Oodi Central Library – and the chance to meet a range of Helsinki’s creative organisations.

Insights gathered at the Summit form part of the data collected for the Creative Recovery project, and the King’s team will also undertake online focus groups and a survey of World Cities Culture Forum partner cities. We are also analysing data collected by World Cities Culture Forum during the 18 months following the outbreak of COVID-19 – including city-to-city webinars, sharing policy solutions in real time, and a database of the cities’ cultural policy responses to the pandemic.

Working closely with World Cities Culture Forum, the Creative Recovery project involves Dr Jonathan GrossDr Lucy McFadzeanProf Roberta Comunian (CMCI), Prof Philip HubbardDr Luke Dickens (Geography), Dr Kirstie Hewlett and Dr Niall Sreenan (the Policy Institute) – bringing together expertise spanning cultural policy, urban policy, urban creative economies, and urban futures.

Ultimately the Creative Recovery research will share findings regarding the emerging and potential role of art and culture in post-COVID cities, offer urgent insights into the role of cultural policy within urban recovery, and identify possibilities for further work that can positively impact cultural policy in cities across the globe.

This post was originally published on the King’s College London website: 

King’s researchers visit Helsinki for the start of the ‘Creative Recovery’ project with the World Cities Culture Forum (kcl.ac.uk)

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