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The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries

There is an increasing emphasis on the creative economy's convergence of cultural, social, and economic development agendas on the African continent. Africa's creative economy is a potentially viable source for development on both country-specific and continental levels. Studying creative intermedia...

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Main Author: Ferreira, Carla
Other Authors: Rule, Deirdre
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ferreira, Carla
author2 Rule, Deirdre
author_browse Ferreira, Carla
Rule, Deirdre
author_facet Rule, Deirdre
Ferreira, Carla
author_sort Ferreira, Carla
collection Thesis
description There is an increasing emphasis on the creative economy's convergence of cultural, social, and economic development agendas on the African continent. Africa's creative economy is a potentially viable source for development on both country-specific and continental levels. Studying creative intermediaries as mid-level actors is a plausible way to gain insight into a specific creative ecosystem. This approach allows for the exploration of the activities of creative and cultural practitioners representing the micro-level of sectoral activity whilst also reflecting on the policy frameworks which creative intermediaries operate in. South Africa's creative economy has been proven to support inclusive economic development, but the sector's impact is often undermined by outdated policy frameworks and failed public programmes. The sector is also further burdened by delayed policy reforms and an insufficient national creative infrastructure to adapt to rapid changes in technological advancements, which is intimately linked to the value chain of many creative goods and services in various ways. This study pursued the research question of how creative intermediaries can facilitate the industrialisation of South Africa's creative economy. Industrialisation is a key mechanism for economic growth. It entails the integration of various factors in the production process to ultimately increase productivity and result in more complex activities. This study focussed on South Africa's creative economy and studied the creative ecosystem of independent and prominent creative organisations based in the Western Cape. This study built on the grand theory of developmentalism in the context of a developing country and provided a framework for the industrialisation of an unconventional product. The research relied on a mixed method research approach based on complementarity. The research design was cross-sectional, and the sampling strategy was that of convenience. This research found an extreme disconnect between the public sector and the rest of the creative ecosystem within the Western Cape. This study also identified creative intermediaries as a viable way to increase citizen trust and social mobility. A credible growth trajectory can, therefore, be created through improved governance, addressing persistent inequality, creating employment opportunities and the expansion of public initiatives which can all be facilitated through creative intermediaries. The industrialisation of South Africa's creative economy can be aided by an embedded private-public sector, to firstly, ensure a well-informed state, and secondly to design industrial policy to motivate structural change and capacity building to aid policy inventions. This study also redefined the term creative intermediary to consists of three dimensions which enables the entity to act as agents of change. This is specific to the context of a developing country in which industrial policy needs to be designed to ensure inclusive development.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:09.918Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice
publisherStr Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40307 The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries Ferreira, Carla Rule, Deirdre Development Policy and Practice There is an increasing emphasis on the creative economy's convergence of cultural, social, and economic development agendas on the African continent. Africa's creative economy is a potentially viable source for development on both country-specific and continental levels. Studying creative intermediaries as mid-level actors is a plausible way to gain insight into a specific creative ecosystem. This approach allows for the exploration of the activities of creative and cultural practitioners representing the micro-level of sectoral activity whilst also reflecting on the policy frameworks which creative intermediaries operate in. South Africa's creative economy has been proven to support inclusive economic development, but the sector's impact is often undermined by outdated policy frameworks and failed public programmes. The sector is also further burdened by delayed policy reforms and an insufficient national creative infrastructure to adapt to rapid changes in technological advancements, which is intimately linked to the value chain of many creative goods and services in various ways. This study pursued the research question of how creative intermediaries can facilitate the industrialisation of South Africa's creative economy. Industrialisation is a key mechanism for economic growth. It entails the integration of various factors in the production process to ultimately increase productivity and result in more complex activities. This study focussed on South Africa's creative economy and studied the creative ecosystem of independent and prominent creative organisations based in the Western Cape. This study built on the grand theory of developmentalism in the context of a developing country and provided a framework for the industrialisation of an unconventional product. The research relied on a mixed method research approach based on complementarity. The research design was cross-sectional, and the sampling strategy was that of convenience. This research found an extreme disconnect between the public sector and the rest of the creative ecosystem within the Western Cape. This study also identified creative intermediaries as a viable way to increase citizen trust and social mobility. A credible growth trajectory can, therefore, be created through improved governance, addressing persistent inequality, creating employment opportunities and the expansion of public initiatives which can all be facilitated through creative intermediaries. The industrialisation of South Africa's creative economy can be aided by an embedded private-public sector, to firstly, ensure a well-informed state, and secondly to design industrial policy to motivate structural change and capacity building to aid policy inventions. This study also redefined the term creative intermediary to consists of three dimensions which enables the entity to act as agents of change. This is specific to the context of a developing country in which industrial policy needs to be designed to ensure inclusive development. 2024-07-04T13:55:04Z 2024-07-04T13:55:04Z 2024 2024-07-03T13:24:35Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40307 Eng application/pdf Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Development Policy and Practice
Ferreira, Carla
The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
title_full The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
title_fullStr The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
title_full_unstemmed The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
title_short The industrialisation of South Africa s creative economy: The role of creative intermediaries
title_sort industrialisation of south africa s creative economy the role of creative intermediaries
topic Development Policy and Practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40307
work_keys_str_mv AT ferreiracarla theindustrialisationofsouthafricascreativeeconomytheroleofcreativeintermediaries
AT ferreiracarla industrialisationofsouthafricascreativeeconomytheroleofcreativeintermediaries