Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia

This report, the sixth in the Focus on Industry series provides an in-depth look at the arts and cultural sectors within the Western Australian economy. With the boundaries of the sector defying definition by standard statistical collections, this report takes a more conceptual view of what are b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dockery, Michael, Duncan, Alan, Hailemariam, Abebe, Salazar, Silvia, Seymour, Richard
Format: Report
Published: 2021
Online Access:https://bcec.edu.au/assets/2021/09/138031_BCEC-Creativity-at-the-crossroads-Focus-on-Industry-Report-No.-6_WEBV3.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93706
_version_ 1848765768914698240
author Dockery, Michael
Duncan, Alan
Hailemariam, Abebe
Salazar, Silvia
Seymour, Richard
author_facet Dockery, Michael
Duncan, Alan
Hailemariam, Abebe
Salazar, Silvia
Seymour, Richard
author_sort Dockery, Michael
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This report, the sixth in the Focus on Industry series provides an in-depth look at the arts and cultural sectors within the Western Australian economy. With the boundaries of the sector defying definition by standard statistical collections, this report takes a more conceptual view of what are broadly termed ‘creative industries’ and ‘creative workers’, covering the more traditional arts through to newly emerging creative activities, such as digital design and software development for gaming. The report explores the contributions that the creative industries sector makes to WA’s economy and society, and the strengths, opportunities and challenges faced by creative entrepreneurs and workers in this State. Key findings: Nationally, there has been a marked shift from print to digital platforms as mediums for accessing creative output. Nationally, employment in creative occupations grew at almost twice the pace of overall employment growth. In WA, workers in the creative occupations are twice as likely to hold a university degree or higher qualification than all employed workers. The majority of Western Australians report that arts and culture has a large impact on their health and wellbeing, creative thinking, and ability to express themselves. In recent years, WA government funding in culture and the arts has been higher than the national average on a per capital basis.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:40:30Z
format Report
id curtin-20.500.11937-93706
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:40:30Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-937062023-11-28T03:44:15Z Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia Dockery, Michael Duncan, Alan Hailemariam, Abebe Salazar, Silvia Seymour, Richard This report, the sixth in the Focus on Industry series provides an in-depth look at the arts and cultural sectors within the Western Australian economy. With the boundaries of the sector defying definition by standard statistical collections, this report takes a more conceptual view of what are broadly termed ‘creative industries’ and ‘creative workers’, covering the more traditional arts through to newly emerging creative activities, such as digital design and software development for gaming. The report explores the contributions that the creative industries sector makes to WA’s economy and society, and the strengths, opportunities and challenges faced by creative entrepreneurs and workers in this State. Key findings: Nationally, there has been a marked shift from print to digital platforms as mediums for accessing creative output. Nationally, employment in creative occupations grew at almost twice the pace of overall employment growth. In WA, workers in the creative occupations are twice as likely to hold a university degree or higher qualification than all employed workers. The majority of Western Australians report that arts and culture has a large impact on their health and wellbeing, creative thinking, and ability to express themselves. In recent years, WA government funding in culture and the arts has been higher than the national average on a per capital basis. 2021 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93706 https://bcec.edu.au/assets/2021/09/138031_BCEC-Creativity-at-the-crossroads-Focus-on-Industry-Report-No.-6_WEBV3.pdf unknown
spellingShingle Dockery, Michael
Duncan, Alan
Hailemariam, Abebe
Salazar, Silvia
Seymour, Richard
Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title_full Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title_fullStr Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title_short Creativity at the crossroads? The creative industries in Western Australia
title_sort creativity at the crossroads? the creative industries in western australia
url https://bcec.edu.au/assets/2021/09/138031_BCEC-Creativity-at-the-crossroads-Focus-on-Industry-Report-No.-6_WEBV3.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93706