4.6 Article

Urban Regeneration: From the Arts 'Feel Good' Factor to the Cultural Economy: A Case Study of Hoxton, London

Journal

URBAN STUDIES
Volume 46, Issue 5-6, Pages 1041-1061

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0042098009103854

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Funding

  1. Economic and Social Research Council [RES-341-25-0005] Funding Source: researchfish

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This paper seeks to examine critically the role of culture in the continued development, or regeneration, of 'post-industrial' cities. First, it is critical of instrumental conceptions of culture with regard to urban regeneration. Secondly, it is critical of the adequacy of the conceptual framework of the 'post-industrial city' (and the 'service sector') as a basis for the understanding and explanation of the rise of cultural industries in cities. The paper is based upon a case study of the transformation of a classic, and in policy debates a seminal, 'cultural quarter': Hoxton Square, North London. Hoxton, and many areas like it, are commonly presented as derelict parts of cities which many claim have, through a magical injection of culture, been transformed into dynamic destinations. The paper suggests a more complex and multifaceted causality based upon a robust concept of the cultural industries as industry rather than as consumption.

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