819 resultados para Cultural school capital
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II Congreso Internacional de Educación y Accesibilidad en Museos y Patrimonio: En y con todos los sentidos, hacia la integración social en igualdad. Huesca, 2, 3 y 4 de mayo de 2014.
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Dissertação de Mestrado em Educação Pré-Escolar e Ensino do 1.º Ciclo do Ensino Básico.
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A apresentação pretende ilustrar a cobertura que a imprensa nacional realizou ao acontecimento Porto Capital Europeia da Cultura em 2001. A análise contempla os jornais Público, Diário de Notícias, Jornal de Notícias, Correio da Manhã e Expresso e a revista Visão no período anterior ao do evento (ano de 2000), durante e após, para se conseguir definir as etapas que marcaram os diferentes momentos do acontecimento, os padrões de atuação, o tipo de planeamento e as especificidades ao nível da programação. Na génese do projeto das Capitais Europeias da Cultura, da autoria da ministra da cultura grega e que aconteceu pela primeira vez em Atenas em 1985, estava a ideia de eleger, de ano para ano, uma cidade em que se apresentassem novos paradigmas culturais. Lisboa foi a primeira cidade portuguesa a acolher, em 1994, a iniciativa, seguiu-se o Porto em 2001 e em 2012 é a vez de Guimarães. Protagonista da descentralização cultural, é um modelo que tem permitido o financiamento de obras públicas (lembre-se a Casa da Música no Porto), o restauro de património e a promoção das cidades em termos turísticos. No entanto, espera-se ver questionado o seu papel enquanto lugares de inovação quer em termos de políticas culturais, quer em termos de produção e inovação artística. No artigo “Capitais europeias da cultura: que fazer com elas?”, publicado no suplemento Ípsilon do jornal Público de 1 de Abril de 2011, António Pinto Ribeiro refere a insustentabilidade das cidades após o ano de capital cultural, “as expectativas goradas da maioria dos seus cidadãos e a retração no apoio à produção que acontece sempre no período pós-capital”. Espera-se através desta análise conseguir demarcar os momentos que ganharam visibilidade e enformaram o acontecimento para, de forma crítica, se poder refletir sobre o papel da imprensa na divulgação e promoção de eventos de cariz cultural.
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Artigo baseado na comunicação proferida no 1st International Symposium on Media Studies, realizado na Akdeniz Universitesi Yayınları, Antalya, Turquia, 21-23 de novembro de 2013
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Relatório de estágio apresentado à Escola Superior de Comunicação Social como parte dos requisitos para obtenção de grau de mestre em Jornalismo.
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Dissertação conducente à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Educação Social e Intervenção Comunitária, sob orientação do Professor Doutor Luís Manuel Costa Moreno
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In a time of fierce competition between regions, an image serve as a basis to develop a strong sense of community, which fosters trust and cooperation that can be mobilized for regional growth. A positive image and reputation could be used in the promotional activities of the region benefiting all the stakeholders as a whole. Mega cultural events are frequently used to attract tourists and investments to a region, but also to enhance the city’s image. This study adopts a marketing/communication perspective of city’s image, and intends to explain how the image of the city is perceived by their residents. Specifically, we intend to compare the perceptions of residents that effectively participated in the Guimarães European Capital of Culture (ECOC) 2012 (engaged residents), and the residents that only assisted to the event (attendees). Several significant findings are reported and their implications for event managers and public policy administrators presented, along with the limitations of the study
Transient Spaces: unsettling boundaries and norms at the cultural event Noc Noc, Guimarães, Portugal
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Cities are increasingly expected to be creative, inventive and to exhibit intense expressivity. In the past decades many cities have experienced growing pressure to produce and stage cultural events of different sorts and to develop new strategies that optimize competitive advantages, in order to promote themselves and to boost and sell their image. Often these actions have relied on heavy public investment and major private corporation sponsoring, but it is not always clear or measured how successful and reproductive these investments have been. In the context of strained public finances and profound economic crisis of European peripheral countries, events that emerge from local communities and have low budgets, which manage to create significant fluxes of visitors and visibility, assume an increased interest. In order to reflect and sketch possible answers, we look to an emerging body of literature concerning creative cities, and we focus on the organisation of a particular cultural event and its impact and assimilation into a medium size Portuguese city. This paper looks at the two editions (2011 and 2012) of one of such events – Noc Noc – organized by a local association in the city of Guimarães, Portugal. Inspired by similar events, Noc Noc is based on creating transient spaces of culture which are explored by artists and audiences, by transforming numerous homes into ephemeral convivial and playful social ‘public’ environments. The event is based on a number of cultural venues/homes scattered around the old and newer city, which allows for an informal urban exploration and an autonomous rambling and getting lost along streets. This strategy not only disrupts the cleavages between public and private space permitting for various transgressions, but it also disorders normative urban experiences and unsettles the dominant role of the city council as the culture patron of the large majority of events. Guimarães, an UNESCO World Heritage City was the European Capital of Culture in 2012, with a public investment of roughly 73 million euro. By interviewing a sample of people who have hosted these transitory art performances and exhibitions, sometimes doubling as artists, the events’ organizers and by experience both editions of the event, this paper illustrates how urban citizens’ engagement and motivations in a low budget cultural event can strengthen community ties. Furthermore, it also questions the advantages of large scale high budget events, and how this event may be seen as unconscious counter movement against a commodification of cultural events and everyday urban experience at large, engaging with the concepts of staging and authenticity.
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Proceedings of the Chemistry and Conservation Science
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Proceedings of the Chemistry and Conservation Science
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Este artigo tem por objectivo averiguar se uma redução nos impostos sobre o trabalho, capital e consumo poderão afectar permanentemente o crescimento económico, validando o paradigma do crescimento endógeno ou, se pelo contrário, afectam apenas o nível de output (teoria do crescimento exógeno). Recorrendo às taxas efectivas de impostos sobre as funções económicas estimadas por Martinez-Mongay (2000) e à estimação de modelos dinâmicos de séries temporais, que permitem estudar os efeitos de curto e de longo prazo, os resultados obtidos para 14 Estados-Membros da União Europeia dos 15, no período 1970-2000, sugerem a validação do paradigma de crescimento endógeno. Em particular, a redução dos impostos sobre o trabalho e o capital poderia estimular o crescimento económico de longo prazo.
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Dissertação apresentada para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Estudos Portugueses – Estudos de Cultura
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. Residents tend to have high expectations about the benefits of hosting a mega‐event. So, it was not surprising that the nomination of Guimarães, Portugal, as the 2012 European Capital of Culture (2012 ECOC) had raised great expectations in the local community towards its socio‐economic and cultural benefits. The present research was designed to examine the Guimarães residents’ perceptions on the impacts of hosting the 2012 ECOC approached in two different time schedules, the pre‐ and the post‐event, trying to capture the evolution of the residents` evaluation of its impacts. For getting the data, two surveys were applied to Guimarães` residents, one in the pre‐event phase, in 2011, and another in the post‐event phase, in 2013. This approach is uncommonly applied to Portugal data and it is even the first time it was done to a Portuguese European Capital of Culture. After a factor analysis, the results of t‐tests indicate that there were significant differences (p<0.05) between the samples from the pre‐ and post‐2012 ECOC on two positive impact factors (Community’ benefits and Residents’ benefits) and one negative impact factor (Economic, social and environmental costs). Respondents also showed a negative perception of the impacts in all dimensions, except Changes in habits of Guimarães residents.
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In a time of fierce competition between regions, an image serve as a basis to develop a strong sense of community, which fosters trust and cooperation that can be mobilized for regional growth. A positive image and reputation could be used in the promotional activities of the region benefiting all the stakeholders as a whole. Mega cultural events are frequently used to attract tourists and investments to a region, but also to enhance the city’s image. This study adopts a marketing/communication perspective of city’s image, and intends to explain how the image of the city is perceived by their residents. Specifically, we intend to compare the perceptions of residents that effectively participated in the Guimarães European Capital of Culture (ECOC) 2012 (engaged residents), and the residents that only assisted to the event (attendees). Several significant findings are reported and their implications for event managers and public policy administrators presented, along with the limitations of the study.
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The nomination of Guimarães to host the 2012 European Capital of Culture (ECC) has put on the agenda of the city the need of measuring the effects that the implementation of this mega event could have in it and in the municipality a whole. The balance of the benefits and costs and an extended community involvement tend to reduce negative impacts and enhance positive ones. This chapter analyzes the involvement of population and local associations in the planning and organization of the 2012 Guimarães European Capital of Culture, using the coverage made during 2011 by local and national press of the mega event. A content analysis of the news published covering the period between January and December 2011 and using three newspapers was conducted. From those, two were local and weekly newspapers and one was a national daily one. Looking to data results, it can be concluded that it was poor the community involvement and, also, the one of the cultural associations in the organizations of the 2012 ECC. A strong negative reaction to the model choose to plan the mega event conducted by official organizers was found, which has cast doubts on the desirable participation of the residents and, consequently, on the success of the mega event, especially in a perspective of a medium and long term effects.