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Slides from Ed Carroll's input at the Cultural Rights Workshops (March-May 2015) May 2015 Blue Drum Agency

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Page 2: Cultural Rights

Equality and Human Rights Act 2014

Two Traditions

Equality: activism: groups, national / EU law, a wide range of stakeholders, a political ambition

Human Rights: Watchdog, Individuals, International Instruments, duty bearers and duty holders, an international standard

Page 3: Cultural Rights

HUMAN RIGHTS EQUALITY

-Person

-Values

-Requires commitment to act and promote actions to realise these values

-Persons

-Values

-Requires commitment to express concern, voice criticism and foster change of values

Page 4: Cultural Rights

The UN Committee on ESC rights, following deliberations on the scope and meaning of “cultural life” in Art 15, concluded : “Culture is no longer an expression of knowledge or demand for recreational activities as consumer goods, but reflects a way of being and feeling, in short, the community’s way of life and thought.

Page 5: Cultural Rights

Categories of Cultural Rights

Task: To broaden our focus on what we mean by cultural rights

Category 1 – rights of creators and transmitters;

Category 2 – rights to enjoy/consume cultural products;

Category 3 – rights to participate in (content described in a narrow/consuming products of culture) and to contribute to cultural life and development.

Page 6: Cultural Rights

Task: Defining what we mean by ‘cultural life’

Article 15 must also be read with reference to Article 1 of ICESCR which states that “all peoples have the right of self determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.”

That all citizens have equal access to the arts not just as consumers (audiences), but also as creators,producers, distributors, commentators and decision-makers. That is cultural inclusion (NESF 2008 )

Page 7: Cultural Rights

Arts Council 1950-1990

1950s -Council having been a patron of community arts and local cultural initiatives.

1960s - Council began to concentrate and move away from support for popular and traditionalart forms.

1970s - Stressed the need for the Government to provide funds for housing the arts. Priorities were:

• to secure capital funding,•to demand a government policy on the arts in the education system, •to develop community arts •to increase support for the individual artist.

Page 8: Cultural Rights

1985- A policy for community arts:

Council’s opinion, it was a realistic aspiration that the arts would hold a similarly integrated position within the local authority structure by the end of the twentieth century. Much depended on the growth of community arts activity.

1984 - CAFE (Community Arts for Everyone) had been established, with Arts Council support, as a national umbrella organisation for community arts groups.

Page 9: Cultural Rights

1985 – Arts Community Education (ACE) ‘to foster experience of art as part of everyday life’

The Council defined community arts as those having the objective of ‘community participation in the arts’.

Community arts could be seen as ‘the process of creation in concert with one’s audience’.

Page 10: Cultural Rights

Task: To articulate and bring life to areas that are largely not visible in public and involve invisible processes

Page 11: Cultural Rights
Page 12: Cultural Rights

UKOwen Kelly warned about a “‘strategy of vagueness’” that left the community arts movement to be increasingly “led by the funding agencies” (1984, p. 23).

François Matarasso, signalled a move to participatory art “from the politicised and collectivist action of the seventies towards the depoliticised, individual-focused arts programmes supported by public funds in Britain today” (2013, pp. 1-2,)

IEFrom community to participatoryto collaborative to socially engaged practice…

Page 13: Cultural Rights

“Culture may now be said to be the whole complex ofdistinctive spiritual, material, intellectual and emotionalfeatures that characterise a society or social group… It isculture that gives us the ability to reflect upon ourself…”(Mexico 1982)

‘(Wo)man can pause and with a smile or a forced grin ask whatthe drama, what we are about. His/her culture is ones capacityto ask, to reflect, to reach an answer that at once satisfies ourintelligence and speaks to our heart.’

Page 14: Cultural Rights
Page 15: Cultural Rights

“The challenge for cultural policy now is to offer greater enrichment and fulfilment to people in their lives so that passive consumption of cultural products and reception of ideas can be balanced by the encouragement of opportunities for dynamic participation in the creation of culture and personal engagement in the search for meaning and purpose in life”. (White Paper on Culture: Access and Opportunity, 1987 )

Page 16: Cultural Rights

Levers for advancing cultural life

-ICSECR and the State’s reporting to the UN

-Irish Equality and Human Rights Bill and the responsibility of a public sector duty i.e. ‘to have regard to ‘ the need to eliminate descrimination, promote equality of opportunity and protect the human rights of employees and service users.

Page 17: Cultural Rights
Page 18: Cultural Rights

Question:

Are we going to leave it to the power-holders to continue to be the arbiters of what constitutes ‘culture’, ‘cultural life’ and ‘cultural access and participation’

Page 19: Cultural Rights

-A new Proposition-A new focus on the demand side in communities to address unrepresentative levels of diversity and participation.-A new all island Platform

Page 20: Cultural Rights

PLAN TO INSPIRE US:

(Re)search and map

Bui ld the local (s )

Learn new ways of co -operat ion

Work towards an al l i s land platform

Page 21: Cultural Rights

thank you