Help us Identify Community Culture Demonstration Projects
Modelling culture as a driver for sustainable communities
Rationale: Agenda 21 for Culture contends that culture can deliver vitality, identity and innovation for communities. Why? Because culture helps to connect the three established pillars of sustainable development. These are economic development, social inclusion and environmental sustainability. Development can only be sustainable if culture is given a central role.1 Imagine large-scale cultural opportunities focused on ‘community’ and ‘place’ not narrowly defined in terms of outreach and audience development? It was possible before and it can happen again. The integration of culture, and art as an expression of culture, into a sustainable development agenda requires collaborative work with communities as co-creators of their activities in the present and their hopes for the future. Proposal: 1) Adopt the Charter for Cultural Rights, developed following workshops in Galway, Cork, Wexford, Ballyhaunis, Sligo and Dublin and deploy the Charter, as a concrete framework to pilot, test and assess the impact of community culture projects that prioritise community engagement. 2) Demonstrate that the Charter for Cultural Rights can be applied to give expression to, and to measure the impact and value of the local aims e.g. European Capital of Culture, community-led participation in Agenda 21 Pilot Cities Initiative; and cultural rights in the new arts and cultural plans. 3) Develop a toolkit that communities and community development organisations can use to 'equality-proof' top-down initiatives, on the basis of the nine grounds of the equal status legislation and socio-economic accessibility, and compatibility with the public sector and human rights duty introduced by the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission Act 2014.
Vision:
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Culture 21, Agenda 21 for Culture