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A New Gay Index May 17, 2010

Posted by David in The Social Sciences.
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Richard Florida stresses the importance of tolerance in post-industrial creative cities, since tolerance encourages creativity and imagination. He has become associated with a “Gay Index,” which measures the gay proportion of the general population in different metropolitan regions. He argues that gay people are attracted by tolerant environments, and thus they tend to flock to the most tolerant cities. And it’s exactly a tolerant environment that is needed for creativity, entrepreneurship, and innovation. Consequently, he argues that his Gay Index is a good predictor of regional economic performance in the post-industrial economy.

This assertion is not without its critics. It goes without saying that people associated with the US Religious Right are unimpressed. But there have also been more scholarly critics, such as Ed Glaeser of Harvard, who claims that the only thing that matters is human capital as conventionally measured, as has always been the case.

In my new book (English translation of title: “The Future of the Oresund Region: The Values of a Young Generation”), I set about investigating tolerance as a value (not as an assumption with observable revealed-preference outcomes, which is Florida’s approach). First I did a macroanalysis at the national level, comparing six different types of tolerance by looking at simple correlations with different measures of economic development, particularly the Human Development Index, the Corruption Perceptions Index, the Press Freedom Index, and an index of scientific publications per capita.

The analysis revealed correlations in the +0.5 to +0.8 range for all studied tolerance measures, using results from the World Values Survey. The tolerance measures were the following: justification of homosexuality, divorce or prostitution, and acceptance of gay, immigrant or other-race neighbors. I also included Inglehart’s postmaterialism index (correlations between 0.5 and 0.6). There was an important conclusion: the single best predictor of development, whether measured as HDI (income/health/education), absence of corruption, freedom of expression or science production is the degree of justification of homosexuality, closely followed by acceptance of gay neighbors! This was followed in turn by justification of divorce, postmaterialism, justification of prostitution, acceptance of other-race neighbors, and acceptance of immigrant neighbors. Moreover, partial correlation measures also supported tolerance toward gays as the most important variables.

I then proceeded to analyze tolerance among young people in the Oresund region. Generally speaking, most young people can accept gay neighbors (between 85 and 90 percent). But it was still the single best predictor of a host of variables associated with the post-industrial society. Not unexpectedly, tolerance toward gays is most strongly associated with women in college-track educational programs. More interesting is the fact that tolerance toward gay neighbors has a strong positive association with the attractiveness of knowledge-oriented occupations (e.g. scientist, engineer, physician) and an even stronger positive association with the attractiveness of “artist/entertainer.” It has a strong negative association with manual occupations (construction worker, car mechanic etc.).  In addition, tolerant students are over-represented among those who list “interesting work” and “music/art” as among their four top life priorities. Tolerance toward gays is also positively associated with geographical mobility and with other kinds of tolerance.

A geographical analysis revealed that the overwhelming majority of young people in Zealand (Denmark) and of young women in Scania (Sweden) can be described as tolerant. But there is a sizable intolerant minority among young Scanian men. Intolerance is especially over-represented among men in vocational schools. Landskrona, Helsingborg, Angelholm and other municipalities in the north-western part of Scania are especially well-endowed with intolerant young men. In some of these places, as many as a third of the population of 19-year-old men do not only reject gay neighbors, but also Jewish, other-race, or different-language neighbors. Even greater shares reject Muslim, immigrant or Romani neighbors.

Analyzing the statistical association between general intolerance and one’s favored society (among male students) produced a remarkably clear result. Among those who accept all kinds of neighbors, 80 percent did not think that “industrial society” is the most attractive type of society. They favored the given alternatives, which were “the knowledge society” and “ecological society.” Among students who disliked at least 5 of 10 mentioned “out-groups,” the corresponding result was that 60 percent prefer an industrial society, which was described as a society where manufacturing is the most important economic activity.

I think values regarding homosexuality is a very useful complement to Florida’s gay index. Florida claims that gays are over-represented in places with “talent and technology.” I claim that the relative justification of homosexuality and acceptance of gay neighbors are the two best indicators of national standard of living, absence of corruption, freedom of expression, and scientific output.  And acceptance of gay neighbors (the justification question was not included in the questionnaire) is the single best predictor of the attractiveness of knowledge-based and creative occupations, the willingness to move to another city, and the importance attached to work content (relative to salary). It is also a very good predictor of other types of tolerance and postmaterialism, but these latter measures are not as good at predicting non-tolerance variables.

We can also say something about the geography of the future on the basis both of Florida’s Gay Index and my New Gay Index. According to Florida, the future belongs to cities like San Francisco, San Diego, Austin, and Boston. On the basis of nation-level data, it seems as if the future belongs to Scandinavia, Switzerland, the Netherlands and three English-speaking countries: Canada, Australia, and the UK. And on the basis of my microlevel data it seems to belong to college-educated women in creative occupations in large cities and college towns. The people of the past are working-class men in areas with high unemployment (but that’s not really a surprise, is it?)

Handbook of Creative Cities: February Update February 1, 2010

Posted by David in Economics, Politics, The Social Sciences.
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We have now received the titles (and abstracts) of 27 out of 28 chapters for the forthcoming Handbook of Creative Cities (Edward Elgar, 2011). I’m one of the editors of what I hope will become a standard reference and introduction to the field. The preliminary TOC looks like this:

Introduction: Creativity and Urban Development

David Emanuel Andersson (NSYSU) and Charlotta Mellander (JIBS): “Analyzing Creative Cities”

Åke E. Andersson (JIBS): “The Economics of Creative Cities”

Dean Keith Simonton (UC Davis): “Big-C Creativity in Socio-cultural Context”

Part II: The Creative Class and the City

Richard Florida (U Toronto), Charlotta Mellander (JIBS), and Patrick Adler (U Toronto): “The Creative Class Paradigm”

Jason Rentfrow (Oxford U): “The Open City”

Todd Gabe (U Maine): “The Value of Creativity”

Tara Vinodrai (U Waterloo) and Meric Gertler (U Toronto): “Better by Design? Understanding the Dynamics of Creative Cities in Canada”

Karen King (U Toronto): “Technology, Talent and Tolerance and Internal Migration: Migration Propensities of the Creative, Service, and Working Classes in Canada”

Alessandra Faggian (U Southampton) and Roberta Comunian (U Southampton): “Higher Education and the Creative City”

Michael Fritsch (U Jena): “The Evolution of the Creative Class in Urban Centers”

Part III: Creative City Networks

Christian Wichmann-Matthiessen (U Copenhagen), Annette Winkel Schwarz (DTU), and Soren Find (DTU): “Research Metropoles of the World: A Bibliometric Analysis of Cooperation Patterns”

Terry Clark (U Chicago) and Dan Silver (U Toronto): “Scenes, Innovation, and Urban Development”

Elizabeth Currid (USC) and Kevin Stolarick (U Toronto): “The Symbolic Differences between Los Angeles and New York as Global Cultural Capitals: A Study of Network Structures”

Charlie Karlsson (JIBS): “Clusters, Networks, and Creativity”

Martin Andersson (JIBS): “Firms in Creative Regions”

Carol Marie Kiriakos (Helsinki School of Economics): “Why Being There Matters: Finnish Professionals in Silicon Valley”

Part IV: Creative City Planning

David Emanuel Andersson (NSYSU): “Creative Cities and Urban Development: The Case for Decentralization”

Stefano Moroni (Milan Polytechnic U): “Land-use Regulation for the Creative City: The Fact of Complexity and the Liberal-Democratic Ideal”

Fred Foldvary (Santa Clara U): “Contract, Voice, and Rent: Voluntary Urban Planning”

Samuel Staley (Reason): “Planning for Freedom and Innovation in the Creative City”

Gus diZerega (FSSE) and David F. Hardwick (UBC): “The Emergence of Vancouver”

TBA

Part V: Creative Markets

Randall Holcombe (Florida SU): “Cultivating Creativity: Market Creation of Agglomeration Economies”

Virgil Henry Storr (GMU) and Arielle John (GMU): “The Sociability of Market Settlements”

Pierre Desrochers (U Toronto), Frederic Sautet (GMU), and Samuli Lippala (Turku School of Economics): “Resilient Local Economies: Reinforcing the Case for Economic Diversity”

Peter Gordon (USC) and Sanford Ikeda (SUNY Purchase): “Does density matter?”

Börje Johansson (JIBS) and Johan Klaesson (JIBS): “Creative Milieus in the Stockholm Region”

Philip Morrison (Victoria U Wellington): “Wellington: Distributional Implications of the Creative City”

I’m really looking forward to reading all the manuscripts!

Handbook of Creative Cities September 28, 2009

Posted by David in Economics, Politics, The Social Sciences.
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One of the more exciting things that I’m involved in at this time is the planning and editing of a new book, entitled “Handbook of Creative Cities.” It is to be published by Edward Elgar in 2011 (hardcover) and 2013 (paperback). My co-editors are Charlotta Mellander and Ake Andersson, both of the Department of Economics at Jonkoping International Business School. Charlotta Mellander is a frequent traveler to Toronto, where she is doing research within projects initiated by Richard Florida (in fact, she is used as an example of a “creative class” mother in Florida’s latest book; “Who’s Your City?”).

One of my aims as co-editor is to stimulate discussion about the roles of planning (both public and private) and markets in urban development, and how the balance may shift with the emergence of post-industrial society. To this end, we have invited contributors with different theoretical perspectives, with a possible clash of ideas, which I would find very exciting.

While I don’t want to divulge the identities of the contributors yet, suffice it to say that they are a diverse and creative lot, and they represent the following creative or not so creative cities as residents: Chicago, Copenhagen, Jena, Jonkoping, Kaohsiung, Kyoto, London, Los Angeles, Milan, New York, San Francisco, Stockholm, Toronto, Vancouver, Washington, and Wellington.

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