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DOES
INTERCULTURALISM MAKE CITIES MORE SUCCESFUL?
(7 February 2005)
A
pioneering new research project, funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation,
challenges all cities to rethink their policies on cultural diversity
if they aspire to be successful and competitive. The project, called
'The Intercultural City: Making the Most of Diversity' will take
place in cities across the UK, in Europe and in Australia throughout
2005, ending with an international conference to be held in the
UK in March 2006, offering practical recommendations on how cities
should be run.
Bristol
is the first UK city to sign up to the project will explore the
extent to which cultural diversity is a source of innovation, creativity
and entrepreneurship and how it can become a positive force releasing
new energy and resources for the development of cities. It will
identify the processes and the key actors and how can they be better
understood and planned by city authorities.
The
project will seek answers to the following questions:
*
What are the factors that make some cities more competitive, innovative
and better to live in than others?
* Throughout
history, cities with a high level of cultural diversity have often
been the most creative and innovative, but why?
* What
happens when people of different cultures interact and how does
this lead to new thinking?
* Are
there special sets of conditions or particular types of people or
organisations who make intercultural exchange more likely?
* What
should cities be doing to encourage more of this?
The
project advisory group for The Intercultural City: Making the Most
of Diversity includes Professor Waqar Ahmad, Middlesex University;
Professor Ash Amin, Durham University, Department of Geography;
Sir Bernard Crick; Professor Sir Peter Hall; Dr David Janner-Klausner,
Local Government Information Unit; Keith Khan, The Rich Mix Project
Office; Ranjit Sondhi; Ruth Turner; Hamza Viyani; Joy Warmington.
The
project will also incorporate parallel research in several international
locations which will enable the team to make comparative analysis
of the UK findings. The will be a series of city case studies in
Australia (Melbourne and Brisbane), New Zealand (Auckland) and Norway
(Oslo, Kristiansand and Drammen). In Bristol the research will identify
90 people with intercultural influences: 30 from the city's past,
such as Isambard Kingdom Brunel whose father was French; 30 who
are currently shaping the city today and 30 who may become the shapers
of Bristol's future. Bristol's strengths and weaknesses as an intercultural
city will be highlighted, with recommendations for its public and
private institutions in making Bristol an open, diverse and cosmopolitan
place.
Charles
Landry, Director of Comedia, the research companuy behind the project,
commented "Multiculturalism as a policy has worked in Britain
for many years but its time has now passed. Our experience strongly
indicates that greater diversity in cities is inevitable and those
cities that deal with it seriously and positively will succeed:
it takes more than a few festivals and an exotic collection of restaurants
to be a cosmopolitan city. We feel that The Intercultural City will
completely break the tired mould of multiculturalism by suggesting
new ways that cities should be developed, to make life better for
everyone who lives in them."
Ranjit
Sondhi CBE, said "This project is critical to our understanding
of the role diversity plays in creating great cities. It is a long-held
belief that diversity provides new ways of thinking, energy, inventiveness
and wealth but no-one has really unpicked how and why that should
be the case. The Intercultural City project will be a tipping point
in the debates around multiculturalism and interculturalism: issues
that touch everyone's lives".
Bristol
Cultural Development Partnership's Andrew Kelly commented "Bristol
is a successful city region with an enviable track record in innovation
and creativity. We want to understand the significance of interculturalism
in our past successes so that we can continue to grow and attract
creative and innovative people. We know that the future of the city
will be based on creativity, knowledge, and creative people for
both wealth creation and quality of life. This research will help
us move towards being an even more attractive place for people to
live and work in".
Further
information about The Intercultural City can be found at www.interculturalcity.com.
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