elena borin
Pegaso University
Naples, Italy
Submission closed
The escalating climate crisis, with its multidimensional ecological, social, and economic repercussions, necessitates a fundamental assessment of the cultural sector's role in advancing environmental sustainability. Rather than being perceived solely as a domain impacted by environmental degradation, culture must be recognized as a transformative force capable of enabling systemic change (Sokół, Pangsy-Kania & Biegańska, 2023), a claim raised by the UNESCO Mondiacult 2022 Declaration.This Special Issue of the European Journal of Cultural Management and Policy seeks to critically explore how cultural and creative sectors can serve both as advocates for climate actions while taking ecological responsibility in their own actions.
The reflection promoted in this Special Issue is also informed by the work of the ENCATC Working Group on Culture and Climate Action, which is committed to advancing a comprehensive and ethically grounded agenda for climate-responsive cultural practices. Drawing on the vision articulated in the UNESCO Mondiacult 2022 Declaration that serves as the basis for Mondiacult 2025 and aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the Working Group underscores the need to understand culture as both a beneficiary and an enabler of climate action. It recognizes the responsibility of the cultural field—including performing arts organizations, heritage institutions, creative enterprises, and policy-making bodies— to inspire societal transformation through narratives and symbolism and also to take responsibility by realigning its own infrastructures, governance, and operations with sustainable principles (Klein, Gerlitz, & Spychalska-Wojtkiewicz, 2021).
A central premise of this Special Issue is the dual imperative facing cultural and creative organizations: to contribute meaningfully to public discourse and behavior around climate issues (Maxwell & Miller, 2017; Shutaleva, 2023; Mickov, 2025) while also institutionalizing sustainable practices within their own frameworks (Ejibe et al., 2024). This includes rethinking institutional procedures regarding energy usage, procurement, mobility, digital infrastructure, and the broader ecological footprint of cultural production (Collins & Cooper, 2017). Equally important is the imperative for transparency and accountability (Besana, Esposito & Fischella, 2019). Increasingly, cultural organizations are expected to disclose and communicate their environmental impacts through mechanisms such as sustainability reporting, carbon accounting, and climate-related disclosures (Borin, 2023; Donelli, 2019; Masucci et al., 2025). These practices not only enhance institutional credibility, thus amplifying the role of arts and cultural organisations for raising awareness, but also serve as vital tools for strategic planning, stakeholder engagement, and policy advocacy.
We welcome contributions that examine how culture may be activated to promote regenerative futures and climate awareness, while also embedding robust systems of ecological accountability. Submissions may explore how sustainability principles are operationalized across diverse cultural contexts, how institutions articulate and measure their climate actions, and how sectoral narratives align with broader environmental governance agendas. Contributions reflecting on digital sustainability, intergenerational equity, cultural rights, and inclusive governance are especially encouraged.
This call is open to multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives, drawing from arts and cultural studies, organizational theory, philosophy, sociology, psychology, political science, management theory, entrepreneurship, cultural tourism, cultural management, cultural policy, governance and development, innovation, and the creative industries.
The following research questions are proposed to inspire prospective contributors and are intended to be suggestive rather than prescriptive:
● How do cultural narratives and artistic practices promote ecological awareness, climate adaptation, and collective behavioral change?
● How can the cultural sector uphold cultural rights and contribute to climate justice, particularly in relation to marginalized, indigenous, and climate-vulnerable communities?
● What opportunities exist for aligning cultural policy with environmental governance initiatives, such as the European Green Deal, the New European Bauhaus, and UNESCO’s Culture|2030 Indicators?
● What role can culture play in articulating a regenerative paradigm that moves beyond mitigation and toward environmental restoration, intergenerational solidarity, and holistic resilience?
● In what ways can cultural institutions operationalize environmental responsibility through governance, procurement practices, sustainability accounting and reporting, and disclosure frameworks?
● What innovations are being developed in sustainable exhibition-making, sustainable practices in the performing arts, low-impact touring, ethical digital curation, or green infrastructure in cultural institutions?
● How can digital technologies be deployed in ways that align with ecological sustainability and reduce environmental burdens associated with data storage, streaming, and cloud computing?
● What are the implications of integrating sustainability into cultural management education, professional development, and capacity-building?
● How might inclusive governance models in the cultural sector address issues of gender, intersectionality, and epistemic diversity in the context of the climate crisis?
● How do we balance the needs of artists and artistic production with the demands for climate and ecological responsibility?
● What kind of cultural policies encourage and promote institutional transformation?
Authors are welcome to submit articles presenting original studies or literature review work. Please consult the journal's information regarding Article Types, Author Guidelines, and Publishing Fees. Please contact the Editorial Office at ejcmp@frontierspartnerships.org for any query concerning this initiative.
Even though abstract submission is not mandatory, we encourage all interested researchers to submit a “manuscript summary” before submitting their article. Manuscript summaries do not have to coincide with the final abstract of the article.
Main references:
. Besana, A., Esposito, A., & Fisichella, C. (2024). Innovation for change in Italian Theatres. Marketing and sustainability accounting in the post-pandemic in “Culture that matters: Interdisciplinary Approaches for Sustainable Futures” , Book of Proceedings of the ENCATC Congress 2024
. Borin, E. (2023). Sustainability accounting in museums. Eurilink University Press
Collins, A., & Cooper, C. (2017). Measuring and managing the environmental impact of festivals: The contribution of the Ecological Footprint. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 25(1), 148-162. https://doi.org/10.1080/09669582.2016.1189922
. Donelli, C. C. (2019). Strategic or struggling? Exploring Sustainability in cultural organisations. Italian and international perspectives, Unife University: ITALY
. Ejibe, I., Nwankwo, T. C., Nwankwo, E. E., Okoye, C. C., & Scholastica, U. C. (2024). Advancing environmental sustainability in the creative sectors: A strategic HR framework based on data analytics and eco-innovation. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 21(3), 050-060.
. Klein, M., Gerlitz, L., & Spychalska-Wojtkiewicz, M. (2021). Cultural and creative industries as boost for innovation and sustainable development of companies in cross innovation process. Procedia Computer Science, 192, 4218-4226.
. Masucci, M., Camerani, R., Restuccia, M., & Buckley, T. R. (2025) Funding organisations as sustainability catalysts in the Cultural and Creative Industries: The case of Arts Council England. In E. Salvador, and I. Pappalepore (eds.) Responsible Consumption and Production in the Creative and Cultural Industries (pp. 13-31). Routledge.
. Maxwell, R., & Miller, T. (2017). Greening cultural policy. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 23(2), 174–185. https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2017.1280786
. Mickov, B. (Ed.). (2025). Culture, Innovation and the Green Economy: Towards a Sustainable Future in Europe. Taylor & Francis.
. Sokół, A., Pangsy-Kania, S., & Biegańska, J. (2023). Do cultural industries have an impact on sustainable development in EU countries?. Journal of Cleaner Production, 428, 139400.
. Shutaleva, A. (2023). Ecological Culture and Critical Thinking: Building of a Sustainable Future. Sustainability, 15(18), 13492.
Keywords: climate action, cultural sector, sustainabilty, cultural policy, ecological responsibility