<i>âIn a research field dominated by worthy activist polemics, Stevenson offers a cool-headed, clear, and thorough guide to the sociology of a policy struggle. Focused on the colonization of art and culture by economics and its reduction to âcreative industriesâ, Stevensonâs book offers artists, institutions, policy makers and students â everyone in the art world complex in fact â an opportunity to grapple with the scale, complexity, and values of a much-needed policy change.â</i>
- Adrian Franklin, University of South Australia, Australia,
<i>âIn a research field dominated by worthy activist polemics, Stevenson offers a cool-headed, clear, and thorough guide to the sociology of a policy struggle. Focussed on the colonisation of art and culture by economics and its reduction to âcreative industriesâ, Stevensonâs book offers artists, institutions, policy makers and students â everyone in the Art World Complex in fact â an opportunity to grapple with the scale, complexity and values of a much-needed policy change.â</i>
- Adrian Franklin, University of South Australia, Australia,
<i>â</i>Cultural Policy Beyond the Economy: Work, Value, and the Social<i> is both an outstanding introduction to key issues in cultural policy, as well as a major contribution to the field. Thinking through issues of place, work, education, and value, Stevenson argues for a new vision of cultural policy grounded in the need to remember, and then to rethink, the social basis of culture.â</i>
- David O'Brien, University of Sheffield, UK,