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Culture as an objective for and a means of achieving a Wellbeing Economy

Gerry McCartney (), Justin O’Connor, Sebastian Olma, Clementine Hill O’Connor, Leslie Harroun and Kaj Morel
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Gerry McCartney: University of Glasgow
Justin O’Connor: University of South Australia
Sebastian Olma: Avans University of Applied Sciences
Clementine Hill O’Connor: University of Glasgow
Leslie Harroun: The Democracy Collaborative
Kaj Morel: Avans University of Applied Sciences

Palgrave Communications, 2023, vol. 10, issue 1, 1-5

Abstract: The world faces multiple intersecting crises, several of which are existential. The current dominant economic design is at their root cause, leading to increased advocacy for alternative economic approaches, including Wellbeing Economy. However, the role of culture, both as an objective and as a means of achieving a Wellbeing Economy, is largely absent. In this article, we review how culture has been misunderstood as being dependent on the attainment of basic needs rather than an ever-present, vital, but undervalued attribute of all societies. We discuss how neoliberal economics has individualised and commodified culture, valuing it only as an engine of economic growth and tradeable capital, all of which has led to a substantial diminution and fraying of the social fabric which any positive social transformation will rely upon. Finally, we demonstrate why culture is an essential precondition for the creation of momentum for change through the conversations, shared understandings, new narratives, and communal spaces of all forms which cultural flourishing creates. We conclude by arguing that advocates for a Wellbeing Economy, and similar economic models, such as Doughnut Economics and Foundational Economies, should prioritise and embed support for cultural development as a non-commodified social asset if we are to adequately respond to current crises and navigate to a flourishing and habitable future for ourselves and our descendants.

Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1057/s41599-023-02240-6

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