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Creativity in the Small Canadian City – Part One |
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Written by Nathaniel Lewis
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Wednesday, 09 June 2010 13:58 |
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Creative Communities is pleased to present the first in a two-part series on the Creative Economy for small cities.
In the creative attraction model of urban development popularized by the University of Toronto’s Richard Florida, Canada’s small cities sometimes seem like losers by default. In a version of creativity measured by technology parks, numbers of immigrants, and so-called “bohemian” occupations, cities like Sudbury, Moncton and Kingston routinely appear at the bottom of both real and imagined hierarchies of city success. How, then, should smaller Canadian communities—ones that are often grappling with de-industrialization and population decline—go about attracting educated, diverse individuals and building a foundation for a future in the creative economy?
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Creativity in the Small Canadian City – Part Two |
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Written by Nathaniel Lewis
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Friday, 18 June 2010 13:27 |
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Creative Communities is pleased to present the second in a two-part series on the Creative Economy for small cities.
Part One of this series, explored how livability and sustainability foster the Creative Economy in small cities as much as the traditional “3 T’s”: tolerance, technology, and talent. It is equally important to note that many of the growth strategies associated with the creative model have been perceived as less successful in smaller Canadian cities than in their metropolitan counterparts. |
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Monday, 08 March 2010 13:28 |
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The Creative Communities Blog is pleased to present a guest blog by Dan Taylor, Economic Development Officer, Prince Edward County.
Betsy Donald, an Associate Professor of Geography at Queen’s University, is well known for her work on the Creative/Food Economy. One of the challenges or problems with the Creative Economy label is it is often misunderstood or worse seen as either controversial or negative. |
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