Rural Creative Industries Research District Reports

Rural Creative Industries District Reports

Burns Owens Partnership completed 29 separate reports on rural and partly rural districts in the region alongside the regional rural creative industry reports. Each of these reports provides the reader with key facts and main findings about their chosen district. There is clear information on creative industries employment, creative businesses, their distribution and the trends in development since from 2001 to 2005. Finally, there is a section comparing each district with all rural districts in the East Midlands.

To find out some more about this research and why and how it was carried out, read the regional report foreword at the bottom of the page from Sukhy Johal, the Chief Executive of Culture East Midlands

If you would like to read the regional reports, you can visit the resources section to read these and other reports.

The Reports

Derbyshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Amber Valley

Download the report on the creative economy in Bolsover

Download the report on the creative economy in Chesterfield

Download the report on the creative economy in the Derbyshire Dales

Download the report on the creative economy in Erewash

Download the report on the creative economy in the High Peak

Download the report on the creative economy in North East Derbyshire

Download the report on the creative economy in South Derbyshire

Leicestershire and Rutland

Download the report on the creative economy in Blaby

Download the report on the creative economy in Charnwood

Download the report on the creative economy in Harborough

Download the report on the creative economy in Hinckley and Bosworth

Download the report on the creative economy in Melton

Download the report on the creative economy in North West WLeicestershire

Download the report on the creative economy in Rutland

Lincolnshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Boston

Download the report on the creative economy in East Lindsey

Download the report on the creative economy in North Kesteven

Download the report on the creative economy in South Holland

Download the report on the creative economy in South Kesteven

Download the report on the creative economy in West Lindsey

Northamptonshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Daventry

Download the report on the creative economy in East Northamptonshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Kettering

Download the report on the creative economy in South Northamptonshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Wellingborough

Nottinghamshire

Download the report on the creative economy in Bassetlaw

Download the report on the creative economy in Newark and Sherwood

Download the report on the creative economy in Rushcliffe

Report foreword

The importance of the creative industries to the UK economy is now well recognised, in Government and there has been increasing support from cultural agencies, local, authorities, Regional Development Agencies and other partners as well as the industry itself. Many towns and cities have invested strongly in developing creative clusters and cultural quarters to attract and nurture new creative businesses. The benefit to local economies and to the cultural offer has often been substantial.

But the creative industries are still seen largely as an urban phenomenon, associated with ideas of modernity and innovation that the city has long claimed as its own. The idea that the countryside, with its old-fashioned market towns, villages and farms, could incubate contemporary creativity surprises many people.

Yet, as Burns Owens Partnership’s research clearly shows, there is an important and growing creative industry sector in the rural parts of the East Midlands. Interestingly, the sector’s profile is different from that often found in urban areas, with fewer young and start-up companies and more businesses with established markets. There appears to be a complementary relationship between urban and rural creative industry sectors that policy-makers should take account of in planning their support.

This report is part of a substantial body of work undertaken for Culture East Midlands by Burns Owens Partnership (BOP). In addition to this regional overview, separate statistical reports have been published on 27 rural and partly rural districts in the region, alongside a narrative report based on interviews with creative businesspeople.

The innovative but robust methodology developed by BOP, based on Government statistics supplemented with up to the minute market intelligence, marks a major step forward in our understanding of the creative industries sector in the East Midlands. We are delighted that, following the completion of work on rural areas, East Midlands Development Agency (EMDA) and EM Media have agreed to extend the work to cover the remaining urban districts. We are also very grateful to Arts Council England and EMDA for their support of the research.

As the diversification of the rural economy continues, and the countryside’s relationship with urban centres changes, it is essential that economic and cultural development agencies work together to support creative and cultural businesses. This report and its counterparts are a vital support for that.

Sukhy Johal
Chief Executive
Culture East Midlands

Find out more

Visit the Culture East Midlands Website

Visit the Burns Owens Partnership Website

last updated: 26-02-2008 13:00

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