Publications Archive
The following archive contains various books, reports, working papers, and syllabi published by the Cultural Policy Center.
February, 2006 Implementing the 1954 Hague Convention at its Protocols: Legal and Practical ImplicationsThe presentation will outline the main diplomatic and legislative measures that are likely to be required in order to ratify or accede to all or some of 1954 Hague Convention measures on the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed... |
February, 2006 The Case for Changes in International Law in the Aftermath of the 2003 Gulf WarAbstract: The 1954 Hague Convention on the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict was written in response to the large-scale intentional destruction and damage to cultural property perpetrated by Nazi Germany during World... |
February, 2006 The 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its 1999 Second ProtocolThe presentation will focus on the comparisons between and contributions of provisions related to safeguarding of and respect for generally protected cultural property under the 1954 Hague Convention and its Second Protocol. It is divided into three... |
November, 2005 Compensation Environments in the Illinois Nonprofit Arts Labor MarketThis study of executive compensation to arts leaders in Illinois summarizes key employment statistics and presents results from a factor analysis showing four models of compensation environments found within arts organizations. The story told by... |
November, 2005 Laughing through the Armory ShowWalt Kuhn and Frederick James Greg made the Armory Show the first art exhibition promoted nation-wide in America, and taking advantage of advertising techniques pioneered by Barnum, they introduced the European avant-garde to American audiences as a... |
October, 2005 The Future of Public TelevisionThe threat of reduced federal funding looms. Conventional wisdom says public television has lost sight of its mission and mandate. Competing political interests, economic challenges and a static, aging pool of viewers have pushed the public... |
October, 2005 Changing Arts Audiences: Capitalizing on OmnivorousnessThese should be boom times for the fine arts in America, as the Baby Boom generation - - those born between 1946 and 1965 -- are better educated, wealthier, more urban and more widely traveled than their parents - - all correlates of active arts... |
May, 2005 Switching Channels: Organization and Change in TV BroadcastingOpportunities for research in the broadcasting sector embrace both formal quantitative and more general descriptive approaches. This study mainly follows the latter course. Its predecessor Creative Industries found a large gap to be filled by... |
April, 2005 The Artistic Dividend: The Arts’ Hidden Contributions to Regional DevelopmentExecutive summary Artistic activity is often viewed as a discretionary element in a regional economy, rather like icing on a cake of industry, finance and basic services. The economic impact of the arts has generally been gauged by totaling up... |
April, 2005 The Artistic Dividend RevisitedExecutive summary Artists continue to sort themselves out among American cities. In the 1990s, they reversed a trend of several decades and gravitated in larger numbers towards three premier centers of tourism,... |