Privatizing Museum Services In Uk Local Authorities |
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Authors: | Nobuko Kawashima |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Cultural Policy Studies, University of Warwick , Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK |
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Abstract: | This article investigates the extent to which ‘privatization’ has taken place in museum services provided by local authorities in Britain. Three aspects of privatization are examined: change in the legal status of museums to charitable trusts; contracting-in and buying-in private service providers for specific work; and market- and marketing-orientation. All of these have a resonance in new public management in general and are of increasing significance to the international museum community. In the empirical site chosen for this article, privatization has progressed in varying degrees in relation to the three areas concerned, but overall only to a limited extent despite central government's pressure promoting this policy. Reasons suggested for this gap between the political context and the findings are the distinctiveness in the institutional arrangement of policy and the nature of the service. A good understanding of a polrcy arena along these llnes is needed for effective policy application. |
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Keywords: | Arts management contracting-out cultural policy mixed economy museums privatization |
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