Index

Carola Boehm (Staffordshire University, UK)

Arts and Academia

ISBN: 978-1-83867-730-5, eISBN: 978-1-83867-727-5

Publication date: 8 August 2022

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Boehm, C. (2022), "Index", Arts and Academia (Great Debates in Higher Education), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 205-212. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83867-727-520221010

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Carola Boehm. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Academia
, 122–136

CPE and example themes for arts in
, 22–23

full CPE framework used in arts and
, 24–26

Academic dimension
, 144

Acoustics
, 138

Adoption
, 157–159

Agency
, 115

Apple Music
, 166

Art schools
, 1, 7

Art(s)
, 1, 9, 89, 99

academia, research and
, 122–136

art education in higher education
, 98–115

arts centre and five functions
, 102

and culture
, 91, 171–172

education in higher education
, 98–115

in HE
, 109, 171

in higher education
, 5

meta-narratives, expanding knowledge domains and arts
, 154–160

Open Innovation 2.0
, 154

practice-as-research and creative pull
, 129

quintuple helix partnership models
, 153–154

REF
, 153–154

research knowledge production systems
, 153–154

third cultures, or interdisciplinarity in higher education
, 146–152

university art-schools as drivers for cultural and economic growth
, 90–98

university-housed arts centre
, 115–122

university-housed research centre
, 136–146

Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)
, 129

Arts centre and five functions
, 102

Arts Council
, 6–7, 46, 53–55, 58, 87–88, 104–105

Arts in academia
, 20

CPE and example themes for
, 22–23

full CPE framework used in
, 24–26

Arts policy as cultural canaries
, 49

Arts Research Centre
, 129

Arts schools
, 9

Arts summer school
, 111–112

Austerity
, 2, 30

Austerity Britain/Brexit Britain
, 21

Authorship
, 89

Axis Arts Centre (AAC)
, 103–105, 107, 110, 112

conceptualised seasons of
, 102

model
, 113–114

Axis Autumn
, 112–113

Axis Spring
, 112–113

Black Lives Matter
, 166

Blended learning
, 170

Brexit
, 30, 72

Brexit-Blindness
, 2

British Academy (BA)
, 129

#BrokenRecord
, 164, 166

Business model innovation
, 157–159

C3 centre
, 136

C3 index
, 91–92

Carayannis Modes
, 148–149

Careful positioning process
, 87

Celebrity cultures
, 28–29

Centralised economic policies
, 168–169

Centre for Higher Education Futures (CHEF)
, 169–170

Civic Patronage
, 33

Civil society
, 155

Classical discourse analysis
, 14

Classical Patronage
, 33

Co-authorship
, 28

Co-creation
, 27–28, 44, 129, 132

innovation co-creation and engagement platforms
, 157–159

Co-ownership
, 28, 89

Co-production
, 27–28, 44, 89, 129, 132

Collaborations
, 27

Collectivism
, 20, 30, 47

‘Collectivistic’ approaches
, 30–31

Committed Patronage
, 33

Community arts
, 45–46, 55

Community outreach activities
, 111–112

Complexity
, 112–113

Connected Curriculum
, 88–89

Content

content-based regulatory constraints
, 74

knowledge
, 87

standardisation of
, 63

Content Integrated Research in Creative User Systems (CIRCUS)
, 124–125

Context
, 11, 16–18, 20

Continual professional development courses (CPD)
, 111–112

Cool Britannia
, 76

Cool Britannia/Creative Industries
, 21

Copyright
, 34

Correlation
, 95

Council for Encouragement of Music and Arts (CEMA)
, 37

Counter mainstream
, 35

COVID-19
, 1–4, 6–7, 30, 164, 166

COVID-19-related lockdowns
, 165

creative and cultural sectors before and after
, 162–167

recovery
, 166

Creative and cultural sectors before and after COVID-19
, 162–167

Creative economy
, 10, 79–80, 83–84, 92–94, 162–163, 169

Creative Europe
, 129

Creative industries
, 2–3, 9–10, 34, 76, 89, 121–122, 162, 165

Creative Industries Mapping Document
, 81–82, 85–86

Creative Industries Sector Deal
, 89

Creative Industries Task Force (CITF)
, 85, 121

Creative learning communities
, 3

Creative participation
, 11

Creative practitioners
, 76

Creative pull, practice-as-research and
, 126, 129

Creative subjects
, 2–3, 121–122, 163

Cross-disciplinary enquiries
, 144

Cross-fertilisation
, 10

Cultural activities
, 160

Cultural amenities mechanism
, 90

Cultural and Creative Cities Monitor
, 91

indicators of
, 93–94

Cultural and Creative Sectors (CCS)
, 90

Cultural canaries, arts policy as
, 49

Cultural democracy
, 5, 46, 59, 170

Cultural engagement
, 30–31, 35, 79

Cultural heritage
, 55–56

Cultural ideologies
, 39

Cultural immersion
, 11

Cultural participation
, 11, 90

Cultural Patronage
, 21

Cultural Political Economy (CPE)
, 5, 12, 15

CPE and example themes for arts in academia
, 22–23

full CPE framework used in arts and academia
, 24–26

imaginaries and lenses used within arts and academia
, 19

lenses
, 15, 17, 21

methodological frameworks
, 171

selectivities in
, 13

tableaus
, 17–18

Cultural sectors before and after COVID-19
, 162–167

‘Cultural turn’
, 14

Cultural vibrancy
, 10, 92

Cultural-oriented economics
, 59

Culture
, 1, 91, 167

art and
, 91

arts and
, 171–172

culture-related amenities
, 90

Culture 1. 0
, 11, 17–18, 20, 31, 33, 113

engagement model
, 114–115

link between innovation and cultural participation
, 33

patronage model
, 90

Culture 1. 2
, 32

Culture 2. 0
, 11, 18, 20, 34, 43

Culture 3. 0
, 5, 11, 15–16, 18, 20–21, 31, 44, 59, 89–90, 114, 154

conceptualisation of arts and culture
, 160

Culture and Democracy Manifesto
, 59

Curated Contemporary Practice
, 101

Decentralised economic policies
, 168–169

Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS)
, 84–85, 163

Department of Contemporary Arts (DCA)
, 105

Department of National Heritage (DNH)
, 84–85

Departmental Resource
, 101

‘Deregulation’
, 65–66

Digital

arts
, 6

collaborative tools
, 48–49

connectivity
, 44, 76, 86

content production
, 44

innovation processes
, 124–125

mass reproducibility
, 82–83

media technicians
, 104

rights management
, 34–35

Diversion of resources
, 70

Documentation
, 110–111

Economies
, 2–3

El Sistema
, 28–29

‘Enabling Environment’
, 92

‘Engaged university’
, 88

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
, 129

Entrepreneurial Patronage
, 33

Entrepreneurship
, 1, 90

Environments
, 74–75

Erasmus+
, 129

Ethnomusicology
, 138

Etzkowitz’s model of university-industry-government partnership
, 88, 147

Europe
, 9–10, 72

art hubs in
, 3, 9

creative assets and innovation capacity
, 45

creative cities
, 91

crises in
, 6–7

Cultural and Creative Cities Monitor
, 96–97

and Culture 1. 0
, 17, 32

Culture 3. 0 and
, 154–155

Horizon Europe
, 160

innovation-led productivity
, 10

issue for
, 11

music and aesthetics in
, 116–117

European Capitals of Culture (ECoC)
, 96

European Frascati Manual
, 121–122

European Union Research Framework
, 10

‘Everyday creativity’
, 29–30

Excellence
, 20, 58, 150

Experimentation
, 10

Facilitation of learning
, 74

#FairPay
, 166

Fan ecologies
, 35

Festival of Britain
, 36

contrasting imagery between the festival and coronation
, 41

vs. coronation of Elizabeth II
, 41, 36

#FixStreaming
, 164

For-profit creative actors
, 35

Formalised partnership models
, 88

‘Freedom’
, 65–66

Full-Spectrum innovation
, 157–159

Furlough schemes
, 166–167

GDP
, 92–95

Gibbons Modes
, 148–150

Government
, 10, 38, 41, 51, 65–66, 79, 89, 121

arts schools and
, 9

COVID-19 crisis
, 4

cultural phenomena and
, 84

and HE sector
, 98

intervention in music education
, 28–29

labour
, 52

quadruple helix partnerships
, 10

university-industry-government partnership
, 88, 147

vision
, 85–86

Gross Value Added (GVA)
, 162

High Individualism
, 28, 30–31, 47

High-expectation entrepreneurship (HEE)
, 157–159

Higher Education (HE)
, 2–4, 61, 66–67, 98, 163

art education in
, 98–115

arts in
, 5–6

arts in
, 109

arts in
, 171

communities
, 4

futures
, 167–172

institutions
, 87–88

interdisciplinarity in
, 118

music in
, 117

policy
, 17

resist marketisation in HE
, 71

third cultures, or interdisciplinarity in
, 146–152

vulnerable disciplinary areas in
, 9

Higher Education Act of 1992
, 123

Horizon 2020
, 10

Horizon Europe
, 129

Hunger-Game austerity
, 2

Imaginaries
, 12–15

CPE concept of
, 20

Imaginary
, 18, 114–115

Immersive arts
, 89

Individualism
, 20, 30, 45, 171

Individualistic human survival skill
, 161–162

Industry
, 3–4, 9–10, 44–45, 48, 80, 83, 95, 99, 113, 129, 133, 147–148, 151–152, 166

Innovation
, 1, 11, 90, 155

approaches using mixed models
, 157–159

business model
, 157–159

full-Spectrum
, 157–159

innovation co-creation and engagement platforms
, 157–159

innovation-led productivity
, 10

intersectional
, 157–159

link between innovation and cultural participation
, 33

management of
, 157–159

openness to
, 157–159

quadruple helix
, 157–159

Salmelin’s evolution of
, 156

simultaneous technical and societal innovation
, 157–159

social
, 157–159

technological
, 43

Innovation ecosystem
, 10, 88

models
, 27

orchestration and management
, 157–159

Institutional innovations
, 170–171

Institutional policy
, 17

Institutionalism
, 14, 171

Institutions
, 3–5, 98, 101–102, 170

HE and FE
, 76

Intangible assets
, 10

Intellectual capital
, 157–159

Intellectual model of mind
, 117–118

Intellectual property
, 34

Intelligence
, 117–118

Interdisciplinarity
, 10, 146

in HE
, 118

in higher education
, 146–152

Interdisciplinary

enquiries
, 145

methodology
, 12–14

International Monetary Fund (IMF)
, 53

Interpretative case studies
, 12

Intersectional innovation
, 157–159

Intradisciplinary enquiries
, 144

‘Investiture of a monarch’
, 41

IP Industries
, 34

Isomorphism
, 69–70

Keynesianism
, 66

Knowledge
, 64, 98

content
, 87

economy
, 1, 11, 90

expanding knowledge domains
, 154–160

ownership
, 61–62

production
, 151–152, 160

production models
, 148

‘Knowledge patronage’ model
, 61–62

Labour
, 38

Labour Party Policy (1965)
, 50

Learning environments
, 98–99

Lenses
, 12, 15, 17

Leverhulme Trust (LT)
, 129

Local identity
, 1, 90

Mainstream Culture 2.0
, 35–36

Management of innovation
, 157–159

Market theory
, 71

Marketisation
, 66–67, 70–71

Marketisation neoliberalism
, 66–67

Marketised HE systems
, 66

Masters students
, 96

Meta-narratives
, 154–160

Methodological framework,

Methodological frameworks
, 5, 12, 14–15, 171

Methodology
, 12, 14, 18, 92

#MeToo campaigns
, 166

Modern musical aesthetics
, 116–117

Multidisciplinary enquiries
, 144–145

Music
, 128

and arts
, 121

education
, 28–29

in HE
, 117

psychology
, 138

studies
, 138

technology
, 137–138, 145–146

National Institute of Health Research (NIHR)
, 129

Neo-liberal conceptualised market economies
, 66

neo-liberal economic conceptualization effects on university sector
, 68

Neoliberalism
, 67

marketisation
, 66–67

Network effects
, 157–159

‘New Culture of Learning’
, 87

Non-linear knowledge production models
, 27

Non-traditional arts
, 45–46

Not-for-profit creative actors
, 35

Nuffield Foundation (NF)
, 129

Online learning
, 170

Open Innovation 2.0
, 154, 10–11, 76, 99

Salmelin’s evolution of innovation
, 156

snapshots of
, 157–159

Openness to innovation
, 157–159

Organisational dimensions
, 144

Pandemic
, 2, 9–10, 161–164, 167, 172

Participatory arts
, 45–46, 170

Partnerships
, 74

Formalised partnership models
, 88

partnership-rich learning ecosystems
, 74–75

university partnerships
, 11

university-industry-government partnership
, 88, 147

Patronage
, 11, 14–15, 17, 33, 51, 53, 58–59, 112–113

Perceived academic culture
, 117, 123

Perceived vocational culture
, 117

Performance disciplines
, 129

PhD
, 96, 105–106, 128

Policymaking
, 20–21

Political dimensions
, 144

Positioning
, 74, 87

Post pandemic
, 2–3

‘Post-disciplinary’
, 12–14

Post-pandemic Recovery
, 21

Practice Based Research
, 124

Practice-as-research (PaR)
, 122–123, 136–137

and creative pull
, 126, 129

culture around
, 141

Practice-based cultures
, 118, 123

Practice-oriented disciplines
, 129

Productivity
, 11

Public patronage
, 33, 58–59

Public university
, 87

Quadruple helix innovation
, 157–159

Quadruple helix partnerships
, 10

Quadruple helix systems
, 154

Quality

control
, 150–151

of learning environment
, 73

Quality assurance

process
, 66

product
, 63

Quasi-autonomous cultural assets
, 101

Quintuple helix partnership models
, 153–154

R&D
, 122

Realphilosophie
, 141

REF21 documents
, 129

Regional Arts Association
, 56–57

Research
, 5, 9–10, 12, 16, 20, 62–63, 72, 122, 136, 139

academia, research and
, 122–136

knowledge production systems
, 153–154

quality of
, 150

research-active academics
, 127

research-embedded learning
, 169

twenty-first century industrial research
, 157–159

university-housed research centre
, 136–146

Research Assessment Exercise (RAE)
, 119–120

Research Excellence Framework (REF)
, 119–120, 152–154

in United Kingdom
, 149–150

‘Research excellence’
, 150

Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE)
, 129

Servitization
, 157–159

Shared value and vision
, 157–159

Shelton Trust
, 59

Simultaneous technical and societal innovation
, 157–159

Skills
, 64

Small and medium-sized companies (SMEs)
, 155

Social cohesions
, 1, 90

Social dimension
, 144

Social innovation
, 157–159

Social powerhouses
, 2–3

‘Social software’
, 1

Socially distributed knowledge
, 88, 148

Socially engaged arts
, 45–46

Society
, 2–4, 10, 16, 64, 72

arts and
, 17

cultural engagement in
, 36

meta-narratives, expanding knowledge domains and arts as intentionally curated interface between university and
, 154–160

participatory arts in
, 170

civil society
, 155

stratification in
, 92–95

well-being of
, 29–30

Spotify
, 163, 166

Standardisation of content
, 63

Strategic Patronage
, 33

Streaming services
, 163

Structural capital
, 157–159

Structural constraints
, 109

Subcultures
, 35

Sustainable intelligent living
, 157–159

Systematic musicology
, 138

Tableau
, 12, 15, 17–18, 36

arts policy as cultural canaries
, 49

Cool Britannia and Creative Industries
, 76

Festival of Britain vs. coronation of Elizabeth II
, 36

term occurrence in REF2014 impact case study titles
, 129

university-housed arts centre
, 102, 115, 122

university-housed research centre
, 136–146

Tangible assets
, 10

Teaching practices
, 61–62

Technological innovations
, 43

Telecinema
, 43

Third Culture
, 154

in higher education
, 146–152

thinking
, 141

TikTok
, 163

Trans-Atlantic Platform for Social Sciences and Humanities (TAP)
, 129

‘Trans-disciplinary’
, 12–14

Transdisciplinary enquiries
, 145

Triple helix model
, 147

Twenty-first century industrial research
, 157–159

UK Council for National Academic Awards (CNAA)
, 123

UK creative industries
, 121

UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
, 129

UK Research Excellence Framework
, 127–128

United Kingdom

creative sector and
, 129

Research Excellence Frameworks in
, 149–150

Universities
, 1–2, 10, 64–65, 72, 87, 95–96, 98, 115–116

1992 Act of classing all polytechnics as
, 119

neo-liberal economic conceptualization effects on university sector
, 68

University
, 9, 109, 167–168

education
, 73

meta-narratives, expanding knowledge domains and arts as intentionally curated interface between university and society
, 154–160

partnerships
, 11

University 1. 0
, 61, 63, 73

University 2. 0
, 63, 73, 121–122

University 3. 0
, 5–6, 11, 15–16, 20–21, 73, 86, 99, 146

common concepts displaying characteristics of
, 75

University art schools
, 87–88

as drivers for cultural and economic growth+
, 90–98

University-Housed Arts Centre
, 102, 115–116, 122

University-Housed Arts Centre Agendas
, 100, 106

University-housed research centre
, 136–146

University-industry-government partnership
, 88, 147

User centricity
, 157–159

User experience
, 157–159

User Involvement
, 157–159

Vocational cultures
, 118, 123

Welfare
, 1, 90

Well-being
, 3–4, 6, 10–11, 32, 57–58, 95–96, 129, 133, 141, 163, 166–167

YouTube
, 163