Title: Attendance and Public Participation in the Performing Arts: A Review of the Empirical Literature Author(s): Bruce A. Seaman Publisher: Georgia State University Year: 2005 URL: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=895099 Topics: economics, econometrics, arts participation, lit review Methods: literature review What it says: This is a critical review of cultural economics research literature, starting with Baumol and Bowen’sRead More
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Australia Council Budget Diverted (and other May Stories)
Arm’s length funding–and the excellence and independence it protects–are under threat.
Last chance to see us in Chicago!
Our trip to Chicago is right around the corner! It’s a rare thing for our globally-dispersed team to be together in one physical place at the same time, so if you’ll be in or around the Windy City on Sunday, June 14, we hope you will join us for one or both of these greatRead More
Createquity, Live and In Person: The Windy City Edition
Check us out at the Americans for the Arts Convention and at our welcome reception afterwards!
Change(makers) in the arts: Who should we be talking to?
We’re embarking on a new research project, and we need your help!
The Comcast-Time Warner Merger is Dead (and Other April Stories)
The mega media company folded under pressure from lawmakers, other mega companies, and everyday Americans.
Notes to “Why Don’t They Come?”
The following end notes accompany our article, “Why Don’t They Come?” published on May 6, 2015: (1) On opportunity cost: Another way to look at this issue is through the lens of opportunity cost. In basic microeconomics, an individual’s wellbeing is a function of consumption (or how much stuff you can buy, which depends onRead More
Why Don’t They Come?
It’s not just the price of admission that’s keeping poor and less-educated adults away from arts events.
Some reminders
1. Applications for our editorial team opening with a focus on alliance building are due this Thursday, April 30 at 11:59pm in your time zone. Don’t be shy! 2. We’re publishing new stuff all the time about our research process on our Createquity Insider feed. We’re learning a lot, and we’ll have a big shinyRead More
Capsule Review: Stressed Out on 4 Continents
Title: Stressed Out on Four Continents: Time Crunch or Yuppie Kvetch? Author(s): Daniel S. Hamermesh and Jungmin Lee Publisher: The Review of Economics and Statistics Year: 2007 URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40043067 Topics: time stress, high-income households Methods: analysis of data from four different datasets: Australia’s “Household, Income, and Labour Dynamics in Australia” survey, Germany’s Socioeconomic Panel, theRead More
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