Insegnamento a.a. 2013-2014

20446 - MANAGEMENT OF CULTURAL INDUSTRIES AND INSTITUTIONS - MODULE II (COMPARATIVE CULTURAL PUBLIC POLICIES AND FUNDRAISING)


ACME

Department of Social and Political Sciences

Course taught in English

Go to class group/s: 19
ACME (6 credits - II sem. - OB  |  4 credits SECS-P/03  |  2 credits SECS-P/07)
Course Director:
ALEX TURRINI

Classes: 19 (II sem.)
Instructors:
Class 19: ALEX TURRINI


Course Objectives

The course surveys the large slice of public policy directed at delivering live performances and access to plastic arts, both across the Western world and from the national level down to the local level. It integrates new public management theory, illustrative case examples, policy analysis, and a broad familiarity with the facts on the ground and the literature in arts policy and management.In the first part of the course we develop acoherent background of national choices for overall arts support frameworks, and we identify a set of illuminating and useful descriptors for these distinctive models.The second part of the course takes the perspective of a not for profit organization operating in the arts field and it focuses on the range of techniques and processes that arts organizationscan employ to successfully collect funds from different public and private stakeholders.

Course Content Summary

Comparative cultural policies (prof. Alex Turrini)
  • The scope of cultural policies
  • Comparative politics and heritage
  • Performers, theatre slackness and the State
  • Audience development and music taste formation
  • Cultural planning, urban regeneration and tourism
  • Public policies for cultural industries

Fundraising management (prof. Giulia Cappellaro)

  • Fundraising basic concepts and principles
  • The specificity of fundraising in the cultural sector
  • Fundraising methodologies and techniques
  • Designing and implementing fundraising plans
  • People raising: volunteers, boards and staff
  • Ethics, accountability and transparency

Detailed Description of Assessment Methods

For non attending students
Final written exam

For Attending students
Two individual assignments (30%)
Policy analysis project (40%)
Final written exam (30%)


Textbooks

For non attending students
D. Throsby, The Economics of Cultural Policies, Cambridge University Press, 2011 (all)
S. Weinstein, The Complete Guide to Fundraising Management, 3rd edition, John Wiley, 2009 (all)
W. Dunn, Public Policy Analysis, Fifth Edition, Pearson, 2012 (Ch. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7).

For attending students
Reading material provided by the professors

Exam textbooks & Online Articles (check availability at the Library)

Prerequisites

NONE
Last change 17/05/2013 15:59