The Cultural Institute at King’s College London is happy to launch CultureCase: a new, free-to-use web resource that aims to put academic research to work in the cultural sector.
CultureCase was created in response to a growing demand from the cultural sector for access to research and it was designed to meet the sector’s questions and challenges. The resource translates academic-standard research into digestible 300-word summaries and makes them available for the first time in one portal. Built in collaboration with the cultural and Higher Education sectors, CultureCase includes a selection of the most relevant and robust research into culture and aims to provide a practical tool to support evidence-based decision making and to help build the case for investment.
Bridging the gap between academic research and its users
CultureCase is an experiment in research communication. It aims to bridge the gap between academic research and its potential users and beneficiaries, by translating academic research into a form that is easily accessible by practitioners and advocates in the cultural sector. It was developed following wide consultation with the cultural and academic sectors. The Cultural Institute has drawn on the expertise of both academic and cultural sector advisers who have steered the creation of the pilot site.
The content on this site is authored and edited by James Doeser, a freelance researcher and writer working with the Cultural Institute, King’s College London. James has a PhD from University College London and spent three years working in the research team at Arts Council England. Through 2014 CultureCase will move to a multi-authored format by developing a cohort of researcher-writers drawn from the Cultural Institute’s Knowledge Exchange Associates.
For more information visit: www.culturecase.org