Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?

This paper raises the question of how a proposition such as ‘Creative Citizenship’ might fit into the UK policy landscape. It begins by describing the appeal of such a concept to politicians keen to latch on to an idea that positions the electorate as creative, engaged and technologically astute. Ho...

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Main Author: Stephen Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2015-10-01
Series:Cultural Science
Online Access:https://culturalscience.org/articles/75
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spelling doaj-02ab1e8e76b7496082430e6ece0c8e512020-11-25T02:24:24ZengUbiquity PressCultural Science1836-04162015-10-0181859010.5334/csci.7575Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?Stephen Lee0CentreForumThis paper raises the question of how a proposition such as ‘Creative Citizenship’ might fit into the UK policy landscape. It begins by describing the appeal of such a concept to politicians keen to latch on to an idea that positions the electorate as creative, engaged and technologically astute. However, Creative Citizenship runs the dangers of being yet another fashionable, wide-ranging concept that political leaders tend to be ‘mesmerised’ by as they write up their election manifestos. Initiatives based on such ideas rarely meet with success and therefore for Creative Citizenship not to meet with the same fate it must be more clearly defined. The paper outlines a manifesto for Creative Citizenship that would allow for a more targeted application on those areas of public policy where the features of Creative Citizenship might be seen to be making a positive difference.https://culturalscience.org/articles/75
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Stephen Lee
spellingShingle Stephen Lee
Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
Cultural Science
author_facet Stephen Lee
author_sort Stephen Lee
title Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
title_short Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
title_full Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
title_fullStr Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
title_full_unstemmed Creative citizenship and the public policy process: A flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
title_sort creative citizenship and the public policy process: a flibbertijibbet, a will-o-the-wisp, a clown?
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Cultural Science
issn 1836-0416
publishDate 2015-10-01
description This paper raises the question of how a proposition such as ‘Creative Citizenship’ might fit into the UK policy landscape. It begins by describing the appeal of such a concept to politicians keen to latch on to an idea that positions the electorate as creative, engaged and technologically astute. However, Creative Citizenship runs the dangers of being yet another fashionable, wide-ranging concept that political leaders tend to be ‘mesmerised’ by as they write up their election manifestos. Initiatives based on such ideas rarely meet with success and therefore for Creative Citizenship not to meet with the same fate it must be more clearly defined. The paper outlines a manifesto for Creative Citizenship that would allow for a more targeted application on those areas of public policy where the features of Creative Citizenship might be seen to be making a positive difference.
url https://culturalscience.org/articles/75
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