Publications /
Book / Report

Back
The Cultural and Creative Industries in Africa and Latin America
September 15, 2023

This report is part of a partnership between the Policy Center for the New South and the Atlantic Council’s Africa Center.

 

The creative economy is a constantly evolving activity, driven by the cultural industries, which make up a large and interconnected sector. Arts and culture impact the creative economy in major areas: education, innovation, collaboration, and clustering. The cultural industries are one of the most rapidly growing sectors of the global economy. This sector is gaining prominence as a solid path to economic development in less- developed countries, with their focus on culture and creativity as sources of job creation and innovative tools in the quest for sustainable development. However, beyond mere praise for the economic and social benefits that creative industries produce, the soft power that accompany these results should not be underestimated. Creative economies have shifted the international focus from mere economic development to human development. In a fragmented world, widespread insistence on the integration of culture as a catalyst of South-South cooperation is greater than ever.

In many African and Latin America countries, awareness is growing of the important role played by the commercial creative sector and the creative services industries are growing rapidly. Africa and Latin America are going through a transformative cultural revolution. Increasingly, the creative and cultural industries have become a vehicle for soft power in the global competition. On the both sides of Atlantic, a shared African-Latin American cultural history connects people. This article aims to understand how transatlantic cooperation can use the creative and cultural realms to foster collective prosperity. Thus, cooperation must do more to support the creative industries, so that societies can express themselves freely and can form partnerships to employ new technologies that connect cultural industries to markets worldwide.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Inácio F. Araújo
    May 5, 2023
    This paper presents a synthetic view of the socioeconomic and environmental impacts of the economic sectors and regions that make up the Moroccan economy, taking into account the current economic structure and production technologies. Therefore, the potential effects must be understood as signals to think about interventions aimed at redirecting the desired trajectories of sustainable development. The application of the tools developed to give scientific support to this analysis rev ...
  • April 25, 2023
    يعتبر الحق في الحصول على المعلومات إحدى آليات الشفافية وتيسير الرقابة على السياسات العمومية والمشاركة في الحياة العامة، باعتباره حقا مدنيا وسياسيا نادت به كل المواثيق الدولية. وبالرج ...
  • April 18, 2023
    يعتبر الحق في الحصول على المعلومات إحدى آليات الشفافية وتيسير الرقابة على السياسات العمومية والمشاركة في الحياة العامة، باعتباره حقا مدنيا وسياسيا نادت به كل المواثيق الدولية. وبالرجوع إلى الوثيقة الدستورية المغربية لسنة 2011، نجدها قد كرست هذا الحق من أجل تقوية المسار الديمقراطي ا...
  • Authors
    April 5, 2023
    Davantage qu'un acte de piété personnelle, le Ramadan est un phénomène éminemment social. Il renvoie à des dimensions complexes : de religion, de solidarité, d’éthique et aussi d’économie. Le jeûne du mois de Ramadan est évidemment l'une des obligations rituelles de l'Islam. Mais, plus que religieux (qui renvoie à l'institutionnalisation et l'objectivation), le Siyam est un fait spirituel (qui renvoie davantage à l’individuation et la subjectivation). Il donne lieu à des prières sur ...
  • April 04, 2023
    يرتبـط مفهـوم الطبقـة الوسـطى ارتباطـاً جوهريـاً بمفهـوم الطبقـة الاجتماعية وبدراسـة التقسـيم الاجتماعي كما يتطلــب توســيع هذه الطبقــة  حركيــة اجتماعيــة هدفهــا القضــاء علــى ال ...
  • Authors
    March 29, 2023
    The activity rate of Moroccan women (*) has been on a structural decline for some twenty years. This trend is all the more critical given its low level, regarded as one of the lowest in the world. And yet, a host of reforms, programs and actions have been implemented or are underway to improve the condition of women, both economically and socially, and in both urban and rural areas. Are we dealing with a societal phenomenon or simply with economic growth issues? What lessons can we ...