2. Current cultural affairs
Denmark
Last update: March, 2012
During the time of the governmental coalition between the Venstre (the Liberal Party) and the Konservative (the Conservative Party) parties, and supported in parliament by the nationally orientated Dansk Folkeparti (Danish People's Party), known as the VKO-government, constituted in 2001, the cultural policy agenda was focused on high artistic quality, revitalisation of the national dimension, increasing private financing of art and culture, stimulation of the creative industries and improving the relationship between art and business.
These guidelines were further pursued by the new VKO coalition government reorganised in September 2008, when Carina Christensen of the Conservative Party was appointed as Minister of Culture, and following the cabinet reshuffle on 23 February 2010 under the new Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, where the former Foreign Minister Per Stig Møller (the Conservative Party) took over as Minister for Culture.
On 24 February 2010, the VKO government presented the working programme Denmark 2020 – knowledge, economic growth, wealth, welfare, including a passage on cultural policy priorities. The working did not include a special chapter on cultural policy. However in passage 8, under the headline "Denmark must be among the more free countries and among the best in Europe for integration", some general guidelines for future cultural priorities were presented.
The overall aims were primarily defined in terms of cultural policy as integration policy:
- Denmark must maintain its position as one of the countries in the world that are the most free in terms of political rights and general freedoms;
- Denmark must be a champion of democratic integration and be among the best countries in the EU to integrate non-Western immigrants and their descendants in the labour market as measured by employment rate;
- the government will also strengthen the democratic integration, i.e. awareness among Danes with an immigrant background about Denmark as a strong community with the freedom to be different, but with the duty and responsibility towards the mainstream;
- the government has taken several significant initiatives to ensure understanding of our common formation of history and cultural foundations. This had led to the presentation of a cultural canon and a canon of democracy, and we have continuously sought to preserve and disseminate cultural heritage, e.g. through free admission to selected museums.
To reach this objective, the government will develop:
- democratic inclusion / anti-radicalisation: The government will closely monitor and evaluate the progress made in efforts to prevent extremism and radicalisation among the youth.
- the government will pay special attention to the need for further initiatives to ensure ownership of the values on which Danish society is based, for example in the form of strengthening democracy and citizenship education;
- the government will also strengthen the teaching of culture and society for newly arrived foreigners in order to improve the individual's ability to participate actively in society; and
- there must be an end to parallel societies: The government will not accept attempts to set up parallel societies or to destroy the practice of mutual pastimes that are available in Danish schools and institutions in general. Therefore, the government stressed that the burqa and niqab have no place in Denmark and they are determined to combat the discriminating views on women that the burqa and niqab represent.
The Danish Cultural Canon
How can and aught cultural policy contribute to secure the social cohesion in a society with a growing number of cultural minorities from other countries and foreign cultures? This crucial issue is about which paradigms of nation and identity Denmark and other national states are putting at the top of the cultural policy agenda.
In April 2005, the formerCultural Minister Brian Mikkelsen appointed 7 canon committees corresponding to the 7 main art forms within the Danish Ministry of Culture's remit: literature, music, performing arts, film, architecture, visual arts, design and crafts.
The overall aim of the Danish Cultural Canon published and circulated by the Ministry in 2006- 2007 is, according to the Ministry, to assemble "a collection and presentation of the greatest, most important works of Denmark's cultural heritage". For more information see: https://kum.dk/uploads/tx_templavoila/KUM_kulturkanonen_uk_OK.pdf.
The Danish Cultural Canon is intended to:
- "serve as a compass showing the directions and milestones in Denmark's long and complex cultural history";
- serve "as a platform for discussion and debate";
- "provide reference points and awareness of what is special about Danes and Denmark in an ever more globalised world"; and
- strengthen "the sense of community by showing key parts of our common historical possessions".
In 2008, The Danish Cultural Canon consisted of 108 works spread over nine different categories of art forms. Each canon committee has compiled a canon comprising 12 indispensable Danish works of art. One exception, however, is the canon for music, where the committee has drawn up a list of 24 works: 12 within popular music and 12 within score music.
Also, it was decided to draw up a Danish Canon for children's culture of 12 works aimed specifically at children.
Issues, changes and debate in Danish Cultural policy 2011
On the 3 October 2011, a new government consisting of the Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne), the Social-Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre) and the Socialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti) took office, with Helle Thorning-Schmidt (of the Social Democrats) as the Prime Minister. Uffe Elbæk (The Social-Liberal Party) was appointed as Cultural Minister. He is the founder of the internationally acclaimed school for innovative leadership, "Kaospiloterne", and for 20 years he has been a vital part of Danish cultural life through his many committee memberships (Further cv information http://www.kum.dk). since the 6 December 2012 Marianne Jelved replaced Uffe Elbæk as Danish Minister for Culture.
A Denmark That Stands Together
The new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together (DST), published in October 2011, states that:
- Denmark is a country where respect between people regardless of background is strength. A prosperous Denmark is a Denmark where diversity thrives. This requires mutual respect - respect regardless of the difference between us – be it gender, age, faith and ethnicity. However, the deep economic crisis and the absence of due care has put Denmark into imbalance.
- The government will create a new balance in Denmark's integration and immigration policy. We will integrate and safeguard civil rights. In this regard, the legislation must be clear and fair and the administration transparent and predictable. Decency and respect are the foundation for integration.
- Discrimination of any kind is unacceptable, whether it is based on gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religion or disability.
- Discrimination and social exclusion of immigrants is unacceptable and an independent barrier to integration. Therefore, the government will establish a national anti-discrimination unit. The unit will identify the extent and types of discrimination in employment and in society. The unit must also carry out publicly funded anti-discrimination campaigns, coordinate inter-municipal efforts against discrimination and support companies that want to fight discrimination in the work-place.
In terms of identity theory, the perspective A Denmark That Stands Together is based on a modern and non-primordial conception of nationhood, citizenship and democracy. Social cohesion and Danish values must increasingly be based on constitutional patriotism rather than on ethnic patriotism and a primordial nation's view.
Culture, Arts and Sports
A special section Culture, Arts and Sports presents specific cultural policy priorities. The government will:
- Conduct a cultural policy that has a special focus on promoting internationalisation, economic growth and democracy - internationalisation because Danish art, culture and sports have important perspectives to offer. The creative industries are an economic growth factor. Cultural policy will pave the way for a freer humanity. Democracy is developed by participation in the arts and sport.
- Ensure that culture stimulates the creation of great art and spiritual development, connecting Denmark and the outside world and encouraging economic growth based on Danish society's values, our social understanding and cultural horizons.
- Cooperate with other organisations and social partners to promote cultural offerings to more citizens.
- Create good conditions for the cultural industries in the experience economy, including focusing on the cultural offerings in outlying areas of the country.
- Focus on the working conditions of growth areas in the arts.
- Respect the arm's length principle. The government will also avoid unnecessary micromanagement of cultural institutions.
The economic dimension of cultural policy ambitions is given priority coupled with a new identity policy, with emphasis on cultural diversity, not exclusionary integration, and a modern nation perception without primordial connotations. The programme emphasizes that in the coming reign a close symbiosis between integration policy, economic growth policy and cultural policy will be emphasised and provided. Only a few words are mentioned on the conditions and role of art.
To implement the aims and priorities in the governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together and recent agreements in the cultural field, the new minister of culture should:
- Convene the negotiations for a new 4-year agreement for The Royal Theatre and implement the agreement for the theatre amended in the Parliament spring 2011, including a modernisation of the Copenhagen theatre structure (see below);
- Formulate a new music policy action plan, including strengthening the conditions for music (see below);
- Stimulate all Danes, regardless of social and ethnic backgrounds. Everyone should have the opportunity to participate in cultural life. Children and young people's encounter with art and culture is a priority (see also chapter 2.7);
- Develop the cultural competence of children and young people through education and improve the quality of their leisure time cultural offerings, both as active participants and critical culture consumers. This also applies to the culture that children and young people meet in the media (see also chapter 5.2 and chapter 6.4);
- Ensure that more citizens experience and participate in the activities of cultural institutions. The government will interact with the cultural institutions and develop a focused strategy (see also chapter 5.2 and chapter 6.4);
- Modernise the Danish media support in collaboration with the Media Support Committee. Media policy will have to lift the democratic debate and encourage diversity in the media by supporting new forms of journalism, new media, traditional print media conversion to digital distribution and internet media in general (see also chapter 2.5.3);
- Support the media to promote pluralism, diversity, education, critical journalism and quality in the broadest sense (see chapter 2.5.3);
- Maintain and develop the Danish public-service media DR, TV 2 and TV 2-regions. This implies that there will still be public ownership of TV 2 (see chapter 2.5.3);
- Convene the negotiations for a new broad media agreement focused on improving Public Service obligations for DR, TV 2 and TV 2-regions (see chapter 2.5.3);
- Ensure that Danish associations and Voluntary Denmark continue to be a part of the foundation of Danish democracy. The government will revitalise the Charter for collaboration between Voluntary Denmark and the population (see chapter 6.4 and chapter 1.2.5);
- Increase focus on digital culture consumption. The digital platform will provide new opportunities for participation in both user-generated activities and more traditional cultural activities (see chapter 2.4);
- Promote the digitisation of Danish heritage (see chapter 2.4);
- Develop the commonwealth in close collaboration with the Faroe Islands and Greenland (see chapter 1.2.2 and chapter 2.6);
- Acknowledge the principle of the right to self-determination as expressed in the Act on Greenland Self-Government (see chapter 1.2.2 and chapter 2.6);
- Respect the Greenlandic and Faroese wishes to develop their own constitution, but emphasizes that this, among other things, should not lead to ambiguity about the Faroe Islands and Greenland's constitutional status in the kingdom (see chapter 1.2.2 and chapter 2.6);
(Further information on the new governmental programme, see: http://www.stm.dk, see also chapter 2.6).
The Arts Council's action plan 2007-2011
The Arts Council's action plan for 2007-2011 contained challenging agendas around four themes for the coming years:
- art and globalisation;
- art and local communities;
- introducing children and young people to the arts; and
- information and communication.
The main priorities decided by the Councils to meet these challenges and to create a coherent and progressive development for Danish Arts Policy in the future are:
- strengthening Danish art in a global perspective;
- creating new and improved ways for cooperation between state and local government;
- easing the application process for applicants;
- including more artists with a non-Danish ethnic background;
- to support challenging and engaging art; and
- creating an arts-related debate in society and in the media.
The challenge to include more artists with a non-Danish ethnic background has created public debate as well as debate in the Council: The traditional Western and bourgeois criteria for evaluating artistic quality will have to be rethought, widened and defined in a new way. The chairman of the Danish Arts Council, Mads Øvlisen, raised the problem of developing a multicultural defined concept of culture as one the most important, but also complicated challenges to arts policy in a hybrid world.
The new challenges imply, according to the chairman, a lot of tasks to be done for little money. The Art Council's funding for cross-cultural activities had, according to the government's budget 2008, been reduced. This gave rise to a general debate on the priority given to arts policy and the role of the arts Councils including the responsibility and the right of disposition in the arm's length bodies allocating grants to the art.
(Further information: http://www.kunstraadet.dk. See also chapter 2.9 and chapter 4.1.2)
The new Action Plan for the Danish Arts Council (renamed the Danish Cultural Council) 2011 – 2014
In April 2011 the National Arts Councils presented a new action plan 2011-2015. The Danish Arts Council includes both the council and its Committees for the visual arts, international arts, literature, music and performing arts (see chapter 1.2.1). The Action Plan is approved by the Minister of Culture. The National Arts Council and its special committees are replaced every four years. The sitting council commenced on 1 April 2011.
The plan for 2011-2015 contains a number of actions and initiatives that the council and committee will continue or initiate in their four-year appointment period. Until 2015, the National Arts Council emphasizes, among other things (authors italicizing):
- support for artistic experiments - especially the experiments taking place in the interaction between the arts;
- ensuring diversity - among others by allowing artists to develop their practice, regardless of social or cultural background;
- strengthening the digital dissemination of art - including by supporting experimentation with new forms of communication on the Web;
- work to promote the production and dissemination of art throughout the country;
- maintaining a strong focus on children and adolescents and their encounter with art and artistic tools;
- promoting networking - by supporting collaborations between artists, art agents and art institutions; and
- supporting projects that develop international networks
(Further information see https://www.kunst.dk/).
The cultural debate in 2011
The cultural debate in Danish cultural policy in 2011 has been based on reports published by the Ministry of Culture: The Report on the state support system for the arts, different reports on Danish drama / theatre policy, reports on the museum sector, digitisation of cultural heritage, performing arts in Denmark and the Ministry of Culture's 40 year anniversary. Several of the reports and issues were prepared by committees appointed by the previous VKO government. Moreover, the debate arose in connection with cultural agreements that were being renewed. Special focus has been placed on the Royal Theatre's economic situation in the government’s new four year contract with the Royal Theatre for the period 2011-2014.
The role of art in society
The debate about the role of art in society started November 2010 when the Danish Arts Council's outgoing president, Mads Øvlidsen, said goodbye with a farewell salute to the Danish culture politicians:
"We've forgotten why we support the arts. There was a time when art was seen as a crucial social and political dimension. But today there are no voices in cultural policy."
Mads Øvlidsen’s overall aim for his presidency of the Danish Arts Council (see chapter 1.2.1 and chapter 1.2.2), was to give art back its lost status and role in society. But he found the task difficult. Politicians were missing a vision and engaged themselves in details. He attempted to get politicians to find an explanation for why the arts and culture do not take up more space on the political agenda.
The inspiration behind the call was a speech about the role of art by the former Minister of Culture, Per Stig Møller, at a seminar held at the Danish Arts Council in September 2010. According to Øvlidsen, it was an unusual speech for a politician to motivate the importance of art in the following way:
"Are we not familiar with art, literature, film history; we limit our interpersonal experience to the immediately experienced. It can never be as comprehensive as art experiences. Art shows us the eternal human problems we all struggle with: love, ambition, hatred, fighting, jealousy and death."
Mads Øvlidsen has previously furthermore proclaimed that art should provoke and stimulate debate. His successor as chairman of the Danish Arts Council, Per Arnoldi, expressed in his inaugural speech the opposite view of the role of art:
"Art should not save the world or stop the pollution or give gypsies a roof over their head. If you must talk about message, it must emanate from the work itself, not added as something extra. If you want to debate, one can write a feature article."
The two antagonistic positions of the very nature and the role of art created public debate in the media at the turn of 2010/2011. Arnoldi's view of art was seen as reactionary from many parts of the artistic and cultural life.
A more balanced view of art was made by the professor of history of ideas, Frederick Stjernfelt of the University of Århus, who commented on the debate as follows:
"I am actually just as crestfallen that art should not provoke, as I hear that it should!"
From cultural policy researchers, it was soberly pointed out that according to the arm's length principle it was neither the Minister of Culture, the president of the Danish Arts Councils or the civil servants in the department and the different agencies to determine which artworks should be supported. In the Danish cultural model, the allocation of grants to artists is left to the different expert committees in the Danish Art Foundation and the Danish Arts Council.
(See chapter 1.2.2. Quotations are cited from https://www.information.dk/, 29. November, 30. November, 4 and 5 December 2010).
The Report on the state support system for the arts
In 11 October 2010, the previous Minister of Culture Per Stig Møller allocated a committee to look at the overall state support system for the arts: visual art, music, performing arts, literature, architecture, design, craft, film and new and interdisciplinary art forms. The committee would focus on the arts support distributed by the Danish Arts Council and the Danish Arts Foundation (see chapter 1.2.1 and chapter 1.2.2). If it was relevant to its work the committee could also look at the relationship to other arts support managed outside this framework. Lars Liebst, director of Tivoli and earlier Chairman of the Danish Arts Foundation, was appointed as Chairman. The Committee published its final report on the state system for the arts on 11 September 2011.
As a starting point, the Committee noted that Denmark has a complex artistic activity system that includes many different support institutions, councils and expert committees in the Danish Arts Council and the Danish Arts Foundation, organising and allocating money according to the arms length principle (see chapter 1.2.1 and chapter 1.2.2). However, the focus of the terms of reference for the Committee accounts for only approximately 20% of the total state support for the arts.
The overall recommendation for restructuring the Danish art support system (see chapter 4.2.6) was to establish an independent Danish Art Institute with its own board in line with the Danish Film Institute. Within the institute, a series of expert committees should be set up to decide on the allocation of funding within the fields of arts.
The Committee also suggested that the lifetime allowance should be increased to a level that the recipient can reasonably be expected to live by it, and that these artists, therefore, cannot simultaneously seek other scholarships.
Among the committee's principal recommendations were:
- The arm's length principle should remain as the constitutional principle of the Danish art grants policy.
- The grant allocation decisions are made by independent art experts.
- The artistic quality is not an objectively measurable quantity, but is linked to a specific work and specific qualities that still should be identified by persons with expertise and experience in the field.
- Because of the quality assessments’ specific character objective, operational criteria for what an artist or institution must do to obtain grants is not possible to establish.
- The safeguarding of diversity is an important factor in relation to the artistic system's legitimacy. The system must accommodate diversity in the field of arts in terms of genres of art, artist’s views, artist’s age, gender, ethnicity, geography, etc.
- It is important that this independence is both valid for the political system and to the artists' professional organisations. Therefore the Committee recommended a new model which reduced the professional artist organisations representation and influence in art grants committee.
- The qualitative assessments of artistic activity by art councils and experts committees ought to be widened to more major art and cultural institutions. Such assessments could be a starting point for creating framework agreements for the large institutions. The councils and expert committees’ function in this regard should be advisory.
The proposal to reduce the professional artist organisations representatives was met with considerable resistance from artists' organisations. It would break down the corporate implementation of the arm's length principle, which has been part of the Danish art grants policy since the establishment of The Danish Arts Foundation in 1964 (see chapter 1.1 and Duelund 2003 pp. 204-509).
From both the artistic and political public spheres, the report's recommendation of a joint independent Art Institute, which would bring together all the threads was dismissed as centralist. The Statement of the Danish Performing Arts Organisations is representative of the majority of the cultural fields, but also the political field:
"Art would drown under such a supertanker, which could not take enough account of the individual arts. It will lead to more centralisation, more bureaucracy - not brothers art." (see also http://www.kunstner.org)
At the same time, the cultural field called for a broader and deeper analysis of the conditions of the arts in order to create a comprehensive, valid and up-to date arts policy according to current challenges of the media, globalism and multiculturalism.
Finally, the Danish Arts Agency encouraged debate in Autumn 2011 to discuss the recommendations of the report (see http://www.kunsr.dk) that the current binary system with two support structures – the Danish Arts Foundation and the Danish Arts Council, both administered by the Danish Agency of Culture, combined with other public and funding opportunities, constituted a multi-faceted and flexible support structure for the arts. It is possible to apply to different agencies and funds, but the disadvantage is that it is often difficult to find out where and when to apply for project support, scholarships etc.
The suggestion that qualitative assessments by expert committees and councils should be widened to the major art institutions was welcomed by some parts of cultural life, while the politicians and the political system were less pleased. (the report can be downloaded at: http://www.kum.dk).
Reports and renewal of Theatre agreements
In addition to recommendations and proposals for the modernisation of the state art grants structure, the new Minister of Culture, Uffe Elbæk (since 6 December 2012 Marianne Jelved replaced Uffe Elbæk as Danish Minister for Culture) was faced with difficult tasks as he sat in the chair of the Culture Ministry. The challenges were, not least, caused by an unpopular theatre agreement and a renewal of a new agreement with The Royal Theatre.
A broad majority of parliamentary parties (with the exception of the leftist party the Red-Green Alliance) agreed in June 2011, three months before the election, upon a new theatre agreement. The general conclusion was that Support for the Danish theatre is operating successfully and it is flexibly organised. The agreement did therefore not recommend a thorough reform of the theatre structure and policy.
The agreement was met with widespread criticism from experts and theatre staff who called for courage and determination to do away with a bureaucratic support system that meets the needs of the big theatres. According to critics it is possible to get better theatre for the small theatres as well as for the big players such as the Royal Theatre. Conversely, there were also clear defenders of the current system.
The agreement was based on four specific theatre policy analyses, which all parties in parliament, except the left-wing party Red-Green Alliance, decided to implement in October 2010:
- Report on international activities: The purpose of this report dealing with international activities in the Danish performing arts was to provide a broad and varied picture of international cooperation in the Danish performing arts any barriers and opportunities for international cooperation.
- Report on touring theatre: The aim of this study was to provide an overall picture of the extent and nature of Danish theatre touring companies and to gain an insight into any barriers they experience. Furthermore, the study examined whether participants wanted a large touring theatre to be located in Aarhus or Copenhagen.
- Report on the transmission system: This report from the Ministry of Culture examined the benefits and drawbacks associated with ‘ticket purchase’ scheme. The report presents statistics for both actors and the public.
- Analysis of the Copenhagen Theatre, with the intention to develop proposals for a more suitable structure.
For more information, see http://www.kuviba.dk.
The New Theatre Agreement
All parties in Parliament, except the Red-Green Alliance, supported a new theatre agreement – which was amended on 20 June 2011.
The agreement on the future of the Danish theatre structure and general theatre policy took its starting point from the Danish Arts Councils Theatre Committee's report Performing Arts in Denmark - Pathways to Development and the four studies mentioned above. Generally, the parties agreed that support for the Danish theatre is efficient and organised flexibly to take into account the great diversity in the field of Danish Drama. The parties therefore found that there was no need for a thorough reform of the structure and public support system.
The agreement does contain a number of specific changes, including an umbrella institution Copenhagen Theatre. The administrative costs for the framework will be reduced in future years. The saved money will be used for establishing open-stage facilities in Copenhagen.
The agreement implies that the umbrella organisation Copenhagen Theatre was to be renamed The Copenhagen Theatre Cooperation, which in future will coordinate the major theatres in Copenhagen - with the modification that in the future it is left to the individual theatres boards to hire the director. Designation of boards in the individual theatres is also changed. In future, the Minister of Culture will appoint the chairman and one ordinary member, the Danish Arts Council two members, the municipality shall appoint one member and the staff at the individual theatres will appoint one.
Crisis at the Royal Theatre
The Royal Theatre's finances are in a downward spiral. The accounts for 2010 showed a deficit of DKK 8.8 million. At the same time, the theatre has accumulated a debt of almost DKK 30 million. Higher operating costs and declining attendance for ballet performances means that the institution is obliged to cut down the number of performances and reduce artistic staff.
Paradoxically, one of the main reasons for the Royal Theatre's problems seems to be the major costs of building the New Opera House in 2005, with sponsorship from the Maersk Mc-Kinney Møller Foundation (about sponsoring legislation in Denmark, see chapter 4.1.4).
The gift seems to imply that the Royal Theatre in 2011 uses a relatively larger share of its budget on maintenance of the new Opera House and less on artistic production. Thus the crisis is not only economic. The Royal Theatre is struggling to maintain its status as the cornerstone and as a national symbol of Danish culture and identity.
On the 16 November 2011 the government entered into a new agreement with the Royal Theatre for the period 2012-2015.The agreement designated the following strategic objectives:
- maintaining the high artistic level;
- maintaining the continued development of artistic ensembles;
- maintaining variation and development through the continued high number of new productions;
- maintaining a continued high level of audiences; and
- dissemination of performances to new and diverse audiences
Among the specific strategic objectives, it is decided that the Royal Theatre shall:
- work with the development of audiences by offering new platforms;
- work together with other actors in the Danish performing arts and arts education plus businesses and foundations;
- work for a better coordination and use of the Old Stage, the New Playhouse and the Opera; and
- the Ministry of Culture will implement more freedom and less micro-management
Compared to the previous government agreement with the Royal Theatre, there will be greater emphasis on communicating with various audiences and audience development. In particular, culture with new media platforms and involving new audiences has come to the centre of the governmental programme's overall desire to create a Denmark, where “people of different social and ethnic backgrounds live side by side.”
The ensuing debate was about economics, bricks and private sponsorship. Is private sponsorship of benefit or harm for arts and culture? Danish cultural policy builds a cultural-architectural model with a high degree of freedom and high levels of public funding in the cultural space. In recent years, the Danish model is influenced by the English and American patron model largely based on tax deductions and legitimate private patron financing of cultural activities.
Economically, the new agreement entailed a decrease in the total amount of 546.5 million DKK in 2012 to 520 million DKK in 2015. Also, the administration of all the Royal Theatre buildings was handed over from the theatre itself to the newly formed Board of Castles and Cultural Property (see chapter 1.2.2). It's a point which the Minister of Culture is fond of:
"It does not necessarily mean that the theatre saves a lot of money. Most important is that the ongoing discussion about what is spent on buildings and what goes into art becomes much more transparent. We get a much clearer picture of where the money goes" (http://www.BerlingskeTidende.dk 17 November 2011).
Thus, the fundamental debate about the public support to the "bricks" or "the artistic content" has lurked behind the surface of Danish cultural policy since the establishment of the Ministry of Culture in 1961. But it has escalated considerably since the increase in grandiose new building thanks to more private donations and the liberation of the laws on sponsorship (see chapter 4.1.4).
Private grants are often donated to buildings, technological facilities and other physical frameworks which provide visibility and attention for the donors. It can be expensive for the governmental cultural budget to finance the continuous artistic activities which is a dilemma for public authorities that has always existed. But it has been increasingly a problem in a welfare-based collectively funded cultural policy, with the growth of a liberalised tax policy for cultural donations (see chapter 4.1.4).
Whatever the answer to the fundamental dilemma to private patronage and public financed cultural policy, it is a fact that the Royal Theatre in 2012 has fired people in the Opera Choir. On 23 January 2012 the world-famous and newly appointed Chief of the Royal Opera, Keith Warner, entered into an agreement to be released from his contract. Following this development, the young Czech conductor also wanted to leave the position of the new Music Director of the Royal Chapel.
Positions in the discussion
The former director of the opera, Kasper Holten, and other prominent cultural professionals has entered the debate in light of the economic crisis and the reduced working conditions. The risk is that the Royal Theatre and other major national cultural institutions transform into "provincial cultural institutions" without quality and attention to global potential. The argument is why preserve a national opera in a new monumental opera house, if there are no budgets to cover expenses for a qualified opera ensemble?
Conversely, it has been pointed out that in a situation where libraries are closed across the country and regional theatres are fighting for their survival, it does not seem right to complain about support for a cultural institution that gets over 500 million DKK in annual state support. (http://www.Information.dk 7-8. January 2012).
Furthermore, studies of Danish cultural habits state that very few Danes have a serious interest in the Royal Theatre. According to a study conducted by the business newspaper Børsen in May 2011, 72% of Danes objected to increasing public support to counteract the Royal Theatre's economic problems. 51% supported the closing of one of the Royal Theatre's three houses (The New Royal Playhouse, the Opera and Ballet House, the Old Stage), if the money instead could go to productions (http://www.borsen.dk 26 and 27 May 2011).
The study shows overall that Danes are in favour of public funding for culture for example, expenditure on libraries at 35 USD per loan. In return, they become critical when they hear that ballet and opera gets more than one thousand USD in grants per spectator (see http://www.Politikken.dk September 9, 2011)
Thus, the limit is reached for public acceptance of new, expensive props at the Royal Theatre says Trine Bille, expert in cultural economy at Copenhagen Business School. Figures in the survey show that Danes have reached the limit of popular acceptance of extensions to new buildings.
However, there is still massive political support for the national institution with three art forms because, according identity researchers, politicians today are revitalising the focuses on national identity and national state preservation. Precisely because it is a huge national symbol - the Royal Theatre stands strong.
Support to classic or rhythmic music?
Public support for classical music in 2011 received approximately 2 billion DKK, while other forms received approx. 1 billion DKK.
The government has announced a new music plan to replace the one which expired at the end of 2011/2012. According to the government programme (see above) this may see a strengthening of rhythmic music at the expense of classical music which has caused some controversy. Furthermore, it has been stated that this is a misleading way of reasoning, based on an outdated and artificial distinction between classical and rhythmic music.
On 8 February 2012, Cultural Minister Uffe Elbæk (since the 6 December 2012 Marianne Jelved replaced Uffe Elbæk as Danish Minister for Culture) presented his proposal for a new four-year action plan for musical life in Denmark. He has allocated new money for rhythmic music from tipsmidlerne - receipts from the state sports pools.
The Minister of Culture's proposal for a new music plan One music scene - many genres includes initiatives totalling 135.5 million DKK for 2012-2015. Close to two thirds of the new money in the music plan goes to "strengthening rhythmic music". Out of the total pool, 34.5 million DKK is "new money" from the state sports pools.
The Music Action Plan proposes:
- 74.8 million DKK for strengthening rhythmic music, including regional and fee-supported venues and transport support;
- 16 million DKK for contemporary and artistic development;
- 28.7 million DKK for new talent development; and
- 16 million DKK for music export.
Moreover the music action plan focuses on:
- strengthening music education in schools;
- addressing the gender balance between male and female rock musicians - among other things through a music summer camp for young female musicians. Today, only 20% of practicing rhythmic musicians are women;
- more requirements for collaborations across musical genres
- Danmarks Radio (DR) must give higher priority to rhythmic music.
Since much of the music action plan is based on receipts from the state sports pools, the plan cannot be implemented until final adoption of a Finance Committee meeting in May 2012. The plan runs from 2012 to 2015 and replaces the previous plan New Tones from 2008.
The new law for museums.
In April 2011 The Danish National Cultural Heritage Agency published the report Working on the Future of Museums. The primary focus was recommending how the basic control of the area can support the on-going structural development. In addition, it focuses on the division of labour between the state actors in the field. Finally, the report includes a number of general recommendations for museums and municipalities.
The Heritage Agency points to a number of problems, both logistical and financial, which the new Minister of Culture will have to deal with. Hard priorities are inevitable. Among other things, it has been recommended to move archaeological research from the individual museums and assembled in fewer units. The organisation Danish Museums expressed anger over the proposal which in their opinion would mean a dangerous centralisation and starvation of many small Danish museums (see http://www.kum.dk/ Heritage Agency and http://www.dkmuseer.dk. See also chapter 3.1).
50th anniversary of the Danish Ministry of Culture
The 19 September 2011 was the 50th anniversary of the Danish Ministry of Culture - one of the first ministries of culture established in the world. On this occasion, the Ministry of Culture published an anniversary catalogue which summarises the Ministry's history (available for download from http://www.kum.dk).
The formal mastermind behind the Ministry's creation was then Prime Minister Viggo Kampmann (Social Democratic Party), which would drive the welfare state of Denmark ahead and open ground for new ideas. But the ideological founder was Julius Bomholt, then Minister of Education, as the Ministry of Cultural Affairs would become the country's first Minister of Culture with its own ministry.
Julius Bomholt was a Social Democrat whose career spanned the 20th century and he was a progressive thinker. From the mid-1920s and into the 1930s, Bomholt called attention to an elitist cultural policy: the bourgeois culture and education was at best obsolete - for example, Bomholt described the opera as ridiculous and decidedly harmful and should be replaced with a new “working class culture” that would strengthen “the socialist man”.
In 1938, Bomholt wrote the book “Culture for the People”. In 1953, he pleaded for “People First” in his party's cultural policy. The focus of his cultural policy was on transforming a particular working class culture to a general culture of all people and human beings. He wrote:
"We know that art has kept moving. It is no longer linked to a small number of wealthy homes, but to the people and its institutions". Every citizen should have equal access to the bourgeois culture's benefits and the newly created ministry would become the key distribution centre. “There are many places with a perception that art is a luxury. But we must seek to open our fellow citizens' eyes to the truth that art is vital”, proclaimed Julius Bomholt.
This view of culture and ministry assignments was surprisingly firm in the following 50 years. Among the parliamentary parties and successive governments, there was widespread consensus on the Culture Ministry's general objectives and the strategic changes that took place along the way.
Changes and challenges
Identity
The new government programme A Denmark That Stands Together, published inOctober 2011, introduced a change in Danish cultural policy defined as identity policy. The previous government which produced the national cultural canon is gone. But it has not reduced the level of either the principal or actual problems and the challenge of the cultural agenda in the coming reign. This raises a number of current issues and challenges to be discussed in the national and international cultural policy in Denmark and other parts of Europe:
- Which identity policy seems to be a promising answer to the new national, European and global cultural landscapes?
- Which paradigms of identity are displayed in cultural policies in Denmark, other national states and in common European bodies such as the Council of Europe and the EU?
- How can cultural policy help to ensure national, regional and international cohesion?
- Is it possible to develop alternatives to primordial national identity conceptions without throwing social cohesion out with the bathwater?
(For further information on these issues and identity development in the present cultural policy landscape in the Europe of 2011, see Think Piece: Peter Duelund, the Impact of The New Nationalism and Identity Politics on Cultural Policy-making in Europe and Beyond http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/cultureheritage/cwe/CWE_Duelund_EN.pdf).
Economy
Although The Social Democrats put forward proposals for an increase in the total cultural budget of 100 000 million DKK during their election campaign, the total cultural budget for 2012 is largely a continuation of the VKO-government culture budget for 2012 adopted before the election. The cultural budget for 2012 is similar the budget for 2011.This puts significant limitations on the options available to the new Minister of Culture. Cultural renewal and development require re-prioritisations within the existing budget.
At the same time, the economic crisis is limiting the opportunities for cultural institutions to finance activities through private donations and sponsorship, higher entrance fees, etc. Any changes will have to redistribute funds from existing activities.
Finally, the strengthening of the economic dimension in the government’s programme raises a fundamental question about the enlightenment perspective of cultural policy, which together with the egalitarian dimension of culture for all, has been the basic value carried by strong political consensus in the welfare-based Danish cultural policy since 1961:
These concerns have raised serious questions in 2011 about:
- The role of private sponsorship in society;
- The division between public grants to buildings and artistic content;
- The major national cultural institutions legitimacy and status in a multicultural society;
- The proportion of the total culture budget given to classic and new arts forms;
- How cultural policy can help to stimulate artistic quality and strengthen the arts autonomy through the arm's length principle and other democratic organisational principles
- How to strengthen artistic expression and the cultural institutions to avoid an economic and philosophical utilisation of art and culture?
More concretely, recent considerations include:
- Is it possible to finance large national flag ships like the Royal Theatre, Ballet and Opera in a small country like Denmark without losing quality, artistic freedom and equal access for all people?
- Would an open national scene with no real affiliated artists be a preferable alternative to the present ensemble model of the Royal Theatre, Opera and Ballet?
- Should the government give priority to decentralising the cultural policy structure and improve amateur activities and the work of voluntary organisations as stated in the governmental programme?
- Is there a need for a redistribution of classic musical support to rhythmic music?
Critics and facts about ACTA
The Danish Government approved the international copyright agreement ACTA (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) in early 2012. It has raised fierce debate, as critics think that the agreement restricts citizens' use of an open, free internet.
The Danish Government, represented by Minister of Culture, Uffe Elbæk (since 6 December 2012 replaced by Marianne Jelved), Business- and Growth minister Ole Sohn, and Trade and Investment Minister Pia Olsen Dyhr, stated that the debate on ACTA agreement has focused narrowly on the perceived negative impact on freedom of expression. The minister argues that the agreement does not involve any curtailment of citizens' fundamental rights. Rather, the agreement is a further author's right protection of artists and cultural life and a strengthening of collective agreement license – a special Danish / Nordic construction, which involves users entering into an agreement with a representative collecting organisation (see chapter 4.1.6).
Due to globalisation, technological innovations and Danish copyright laws, the following developments have occurred:
- In line with globalisation, trade with countries outside the EU increased therefore Denmark will have better opportunities to enforce these rights outside the EU.
- Technological advances in recent years made piracy easier and has increased proliferation of counterfeit goods, i.e. EU customs authorities estimate that illegal copying tripled from 2005-2010.
- As a consequence, annually European companies lose tens of billions of DKK, including designers, artists and production companies. Much of this copying has the character of organised economic crime.
- There is daily illegal downloading of music and movies, which means that artists miss the opportunity to get paid for their productions.
- Thus the ACTA agreement is aimed primarily at combating illegal copying and distributing the rules on enforcement of rights, already existing in Europe, to a number of countries outside the EU.
- The ACTA agreement does not create new powers to enforce intellectual property rights, but aims only to ensure more efficient use of existing regulations. ACTA does not change the definition of legal and illegal.
- The agreement does not involve curtailment of citizens' fundamental rights, including freedom of expression and the right to privacy. Respects for these rights are clearly enshrined in several places in ACTA.
- ACTA is an international agreement that is about to improve international enforcement of intellectual property rights, such as patents, trademarks, copyright and authors’ rights, while legal certainty for citizens is not compromised.
- ACTA's rules on enforcement of rights also cover situations where the copyright violations are online, but do not in any way limit consumer freedoms, including the right of consumers to use the Internet.
- ACTA do not alter the responsibilities and obligations that are already protected by Danish copyright laws (see chapter 4.1.6). The agreement thus does not introduce stricter rules for Internet use.
- ACTA implies, for example, that a Danish rock band is better off (if their hits are pirated and made available free on the Internet) in an ACTA country where enforcement has not previously been as effective as in Denmark and the EU. ACTA gives the band a guarantee that the ACTA countries' legal systems can hold the offender accountable and remove the illegal copy from the Internet.
- The government therefore considers the ACTA as a good deal for Denmark and the EU.
- The Danish EU Presidency will therefore work in good faith to ensure that the agreement moves as far as possible in the EU process during its Presidency in the first half of 2012. (Further information: http://www.information.com, 10-11 February 2012).
Opponents of the act have criticised it for its negative effects on fundamental digital and civic rights, freedom of expression and communication privacy. Furthermore, the negotiation process has been criticised for excluding civil society groups, developing countries and the general public.
Danish cultural policy's "Catch 22"
Danish cultural policy in 2012 is placed in a "Catch 22" situation: Because of the status quo in the total cultural budget, the government will have to make tough decisions about what cuts to make. The quality of symphony orchestras may be impacted, budgets for museums may have to be cut or artistic quality in the Royal Theatre's new Opera Buildings and Playhouse may be downgraded - all of which are cultural institutions that have a high symbolic national value for the welfare based national state of Denmark.
Some have suggested that there is a need for a modernisation of Danish cultural policy that goes beyond administrative adjustments. Denmark needs a new cultural model that gives priority to artistic content rather than to economic stimulation, branding, bricks and monumental projects.
The Local Government Reform
The Local Government Reform, put into force on 1 January 2007 (see chapter 1.2.2), has given rise to a widespread debate on its implications for art and culture. The Reform has, in the period January 2007 – March 2010, resulted in about 240 libraries being closed down. Also, local theatres, museums and other institutions have been closed or forced to work under difficult economic positions due the fact that the municipalities have been given the full political, administrative and financial responsibility to handle cultural institutions and activities with a natural local affiliation (see chapter 4.2.3 and chapter 4.2.5).
The economic crisis and the working programme of the reorganised government, which was published in 24 February 2010, has intensified the cultural debate on how to finance local cultural institutions in the municipalities in the years to come. The working programme of the government implies a reduction in the public budgets of about 4 billion EUR in 2011 and 2012 – especially impacting on the budgets of the municipalities. Will the only new investments be in the hospital sector? What do these economic reductions imply for the decentralised cultural policy in the municipalities in the future? Is it necessary to rethink the Local Government Reform in the cultural policy field to avoid an asymmetric cultural development in Denmark – in spite of the golden ambitions in favour of local societies and included in the new cultural strategy Culture for All, presented by the government in December 2009?
In November 2010 the results of a Danish survey of citizens on the best and worst initiatives implemented by the present VKO government in the period 2001-2010 were published. 14 % of the population estimated that the Local Government Reform was promising, but 37% reported that it was one of the worst reforms undertaken by the government in the period.
Following the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, published in October 2011, an evaluation of municipal reform and the current division between municipalities, regions and the state was carried out. There are still small areas within cultural policy where local government reform has not been finally implemented in the sense that temporary transitional arrangements still exist.
The regions' cultural policy is not considered important by other parties except those who have obtained support from the regions. The government's assessment of the reform might be a chance to clarify the regions continued cultural efforts.
This information will be published as soon as possible.
This information will be published as soon as possible.
Last update: March, 2012
In two recent reports issued by the Ministry of Culture, Reach Out! and Culture for all, more attention is given to user-generated content and digital media. In Reach Out!, focus in mainly on the instrumental use of these aspects, encouraging these kind of uses to attract children and youth, and to create experiences which the public / users is ready to pay for. Hence, the focus is mainly on the quantitative side of culture, where attendance numbers and financial income is encouraged. The report is not particularly accurate on its last challenge, which is increasing quality, as it seems to get locked in the tension between encouraging amateur participation and ensuring professional standards. This is due to the report's limited view on the potential of digital media platforms, as a clear distinction is made between the "authentic here-and-now experience" and "the cultural institutions' potential of using digital media to establish contacts with its users". Here, the qualitative emancipative side of engaging in artistic creations is left out.
The same tendency is again dominating in Culture for all, where digital and electronic media is seen as platforms to communicate and give access to what is happening in Danish cultural life, to evoke interest and to facilitate a more positive and nuanced experience of provided information within institutional spaces. There are some interesting aspects in the report, which indicate a more nuanced view of the potential within digital communication, such as the digitisation of various databases and archives. There are, however, no solutions offered concerning the scope, terms of access and use of given services.
Overall, increasing weight is being put on processes of digitalisation in Danish cultural policy, in particular on digitising the cultural heritage. A key document in this process is the report Digitalising the Cultural Heritage, issued in 2009. In this report, much weight is put on conservation, protection and accessibility of a digitally coded version of the cultural heritage. Many cultural institutions are currently working actively with these issues, for instance the SMK Digital (National Gallery of Denmark) and a new project called Danish Cultural Heritage, which works at giving digital accessibility to the Danish cultural heritage. The Danish Cultural Heritage project involves co-operation between the Danish Broadcasting Corporation, the Danish Film Institute, The Royal Library, National Museum, the National Gallery of Denmark, The State Archives, the State Library and The Danish Agency for Culture.
Cultural heritage has a central role in the construction of "Danish identities" in a globalised world, as well as an increased emphasis on the behalf of the EU on digitising the European cultural heritage. A good example of this is the Europeana project.
Processes of digitalisation are high on the agenda within Danish cultural policy. This can for instance be seen in the Film Agreement (see chapter 1.4.3), in projects that touch upon providing access and use to digital archives, as well as challenges regarding copyright.
Last update: March, 2012
Government programmes supporting intercultural dialogue and co-operation are mainly channelled via intergovernmental organisations such as the Danish Centre for Culture and Development (DCCD, Center for Kultur og Udvikling) and the Danish Agency for International Education. The co-operation between the intergovernmental organisations and specific target groups is carried out in co-operation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Udenrigsministeriet) and DANIDA (Danish International Development Assistance), the ministry's agency for international development activities.
The Danish Centre for Cultural Development (Center for Kultur og Udvikling) is an independent institution related to the Ministry of Culture by a performance contract. DCCD promotes cultural co-operation between Denmark and the developing countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Middle East through presenting art and culture from the developing countries to the Danish public. An example of this work is organising festivals celebrating other cultures, presenting Danish art and culture in the developing countries, and functioning as a knowledge and counselling centre for Danish institutions and organisations which, in recent years, have upgraded cultural co-operation with the developing countries. One major festival, Images of the Middle East, is presented in this compendium's Cases of Good Practice on Intercultural Dialogue.
For more information see: https://globalnyt.dk/content/center-kultur-og-udvikling-cku-danish-center-culture-and-development-dccd and chapter 2.9.
Denmark is also participating in EU and Nordic programmes supporting trans-national youth exchange and co-operation within Europe, Eastern Europe, the Caucasus region and the Mediterranean countries. The programmes entitled Youth in Action and the Nordic Children's and Youth Committee Scheme (Nordisk Børne- og Ungdomskomités tilskudsordning) are managed by the Danish Agency for International Education.
The Danish government is also supporting programmes with the aim of strengthening democracy and intercultural understanding in the Middle East and developing countries. These are managed by the Danish Youth Council (Dansk Ungdoms Fællesråd). See: http://www.duf.dk
Several Danish NGOs apply for the above mentioned funding in view of maintaining and establishing cross-border intercultural dialogue and co-operation. Danish institutions and associations also work on cross-border intercultural activities with no significant grant support, but are supported by structures set up to enhance co-operation activities. Examples of such structures are the UNESCO Associated Schools Project. See: http://www.unesco-asp.dk – the Asia-Europe Foundation: http://www.asef.org - the Etwinning network: http://www.etwinning.net.
Denmark's present development policy underlines the importance of international cultural co-operation and an increasing focus on cultural dialogue and values. Government allocations to humanitarian assistance through the Danish NGOs amounted to a total of DKK 402.3 million, corresponding to approximately 36.4% of total Danish humanitarian assistance and 3.7% of total development assistance in 2005.
See: http://amg.um.dk/en/policies-and-strategies/stategy-for-danish-development-cooperation/
Intercultural dialogue: actors, strategies, programmes
One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, amended in October 2011 and the Danish Presidency of the EU January – July 2012 (see chapter 1.4) is to improve a more open identity and integration policy and strengthen intercultural dialogue (see chapter 2.1).
There is no specific legislation covering interculturalism, apart from the very important legislative frameworks for home rule in the Faeroe Islands and the self-governing system in Greenland which came into force on June 21 2009 (see chapter 2.6). In compliance with the Danish tradition of self-governance, responsibility for the implementation of cultural policy and cultural projects for cultural minorities, groups and communities lies with the institutions, institutes, councils and boards.
The Centre for Cultural Development / DCCD, The Danish Cultural Institutes and Danish Agency for International Education are the major organisers of intercultural dialogue in Denmark and abroad, financed by private and public funding.
To some extent, the councils and boards within the agencies of the Ministry of Culture, the state cultural institutions and the local cultural institutions, spread over the country and funded partly by the state and the municipalities, also take responsibility in developing special programmes and measures for "the new Danes", refugees and other new audiences.
Examples of initiatives promoting intercultural dialogue are:
- the Danish Royal Theatre has reduced the ticket prices for refugees and immigrants to a tenth of the normal price (see chapter 2.6 and chapter 4.2);
- a local media institution took part in creating the television channel I-TV, a television channel for and about immigrants (see chapter 2.6); and
- the Danish Centre for Culture and Development (DCCD) promotes cultural co-operation between Denmark and the developing countries in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Middle East. DCCD presents art and culture from the developing countries in co-operation with partners in Denmark and provides the framework for large initiatives such as the Images Festivals and information projects (see https://globalnyt.dk/content/center-kultur-og-udvikling-cku-danish-center-culture-and-development-dccd).
Additional Resources:
Government's overall approach to intercultural dialogue
Denmark has initiated or takes part in several trans-national exchange and cooperation programmes within education. Intercultural dialogue and co-operation are encouraged in all these programmes.
The majority of education programmes available are the result of intergovernmental co-operation mainly within EU and the Nordic Council of Ministers (see chapter 1.4.2). The EU's Lifelong Learning Programme and the Nordplus programme support European cross-border co-operation at all education levels, and there are EU programmes for co-operation at higher education level with all continents. The decentralised funds within the LLP and Nordplus are administered by the Danish Agency for International Education, an authority within the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation. On 3 October 2011 the ministry was renamed the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Higher Education, and its fields of responsibility have been altered (further information: http://www.fivu.dk)
Some programmes focus particularly intercultural dialogue in the sense of inclusion, personal development, active citizenship and democracy. Among these programmes are:
- the Danish Folk High School Grant Scheme - which support citizens of new EU-countries coming to Danish folk high schools and Danes going to folk high schools in other Nordic countries. Danish Folk High Schools provide courses in art, culture, history, politics etc. without any formal examinations. The Folk High Schools were created as a part of the liberal movement in late 18th century (see chapter 1.1). The overall purpose is "enlightenment of citizens" and especially to promote intercultural dialogue;
- the Nordic Nordplus programme for adult learning;
- Grundtvig – part of the Lifelong Learning Programme focusing on adult learning. It supports co-operation projects, for example: "Intercultural Co-Existence – Rights and Duties (ICCORD)", "From Migrant to European Citizen" and "Sharing and Understanding Identity Through Culture, Art & Self-Expression (SUITCASE)"; and
- Youth in Action – the EU programme for young people aged 15-28. It aims to inspire a sense of active citizenship, solidarity and tolerance among young Europeans and to involve them in shaping the Union's future.
Others schemes are based on bilateral agreements between Denmark and foreign governments or regions, for example:
- the Danish Government Scholarships under the Cultural Agreements with 27 countries;
- DK-USA programme for higher education in the vocational field; and
- Denmark – USA / Canada supports cooperation between university colleges and academies of professional higher education and similar institutions in the US and Canada.
Last update: March, 2012
The most important Danish radio and TV stations are:
- Danmarks Radio (DR), which broadcasts the TV channels DR and DR 2, along with DR Update, DR K (focuses on culture, history, music and film), DR Ramasjang (for children) and DR HD (high definition and focus on young people). DR transmits the FM radio channels P1, P3 and P4, as well as regional channels and channels on digital platforms. On 1 November 2009 Denmark shifted to digital antenna TV in order to enhance picture quality, sound, TV format, and to offer better services such as improved subtitles and a sight interpreter system.
- TV 2/Danmark A/S, which broadcasts the TV channels TV 2, and (through satellite) TV2 News, TV 2 Zulu, TV 2 Charlie, TV 2 Film and TV 2 Sport. TV 2 also operates 8 regional channels, which broadcast primarily from "windows" within TV 2 main channel. The eight regional channels are: TV 2 / Lorry, TV 2 SYD A/S, TV 2 / Nord, TV2 / Bornholm, TV2 / Øst, TV2 / Østjylland, TV2 / Midt-Vest and TV2 / Fyn.
- TV 2 / Danmark's main channel, TV 2, was established in 1986 as a new public service TV station that was meant to provide an alternative to DR. In 2004 it became a joint-stock company owned entirely by the Danish state. These changes meant that TV 2 had to gather all its income from advertising and income from its niche channels. As this did not prove financially viable, the channel is from January 2012, a subscription channel. This decision is in line with requirements made by EU Commission – which was accepted in spring 2011.
- In 2011, DR's fourth FM radio channel was closed down to provide more competition to the remaining DR channels. The new channel is called Radio 24/syv.
- The fifth FM radio channel is driven by Nova Radio, which covers about 80% of Denmark and the sixth FM Radio Channel is Radio 100FM which covers about 38% of Denmark.
- SBS TV transmits on a range of frequencies that used to be reserved for local TV.
- In Denmark, there are approximately 286 local TV stations and approximately 326 local radio stations.
- Three Danish radio stations are broadcast via satellite, and one via short wave.
- In Denmark, there are approximately 20 satellite and cable TV stations
After years of economic turbulence, particularly caused by the building of a new radio, television and a concert house, Danmarks Radio (DR) revealed a new strategy for 2011-2014. The strategy is called "Sharper DR" and is intended to place focus on content again – after years of budget deficits related to the cost of the new DR building and the concert house. According to the new strategy, DR will be known for quality content of relevance and importance. In short, the emphasis is now on a more "classical" notion of public service content. In addition, DR has identified five main areas of interest:
- Focus on youth target group;
- More material from the whole of Denmark;
- Not more – but better news;
- Culture with relevance to more people; and
- Journalism with more impact.
The Media Agreement 2011-2014 and the Media Support Project
The Media Agreement, for 2011-2014, focuses on quality and diversity. There are no plans to extend DR's supply of TV and radio channels, but rather to increase the quality of available channels. Included in these objectives is more focus on Danish art and culture and to play more Danish music on the radio channels.
TV2 was erected as a direct competition to DR's monopoly on public service TV and, according to the Media agreement, DR's FM radio channel P2 will be closed down in early 2011 and a new channel erected in direct competition to the remaining three FM radio stations within the realm of DR. This closure was implemented in 2011 and a new one established, called Radio 24/syv. Approximately 100 million DKK of public license fees will be allocated to stations annually.
Other agendas in the new Media Agreement include:
- continuation and expansion of the public service pool;
- strengthening Danish film;
- strengthening the private production milieu;
- development of the radio market;
- more freedom of choice for Danish TV audiences;
- adoption of product placement and other issues that the EU AVMS Directive introduced;
- continuation of the processes of privatising TV2; and
- strengthening of local radio and TV.
For more detailed account, see "Mediepolitisk aftale 2011-2014", URL: http://kulturministeriet.dk/da/Kulturpolitik/Medier/Medieaftalen/
The overall aim of the agreement is to ensure the license finances Denmark's Radio (DR) while providing more room for commercial players in the Danish media landscape.
At that time the opposition in the Danish parliament, consisting of the Danish Social Democrats, Socialist People's Party, the Danish Social-Liberal Party and the Red-Green Alliance could not vote for the proposal because it was believed that privatisation of the media would reduce the DR's ability to meet public service obligations on a high quality level. The opposition did not believe that there would be more quality, diversity and critical media publicity by simply privatising and increasing competition in the public service by a redistribution of the license by, among other things, inviting tenders for a private FM channel. Moreover, the opposition influenced the former Minister of Culture to open up support for web media. The discussion inspired the former Minister of Culture, Per Stig Møller, to set up a committee to prepare a foundation for the government's position on public media support.
The committee was supposed to develop potential models for future media support in Denmark and was assigned to complete its work no later than 1 October 2011. The result is a report called Democracy Support – Tomorrow's Public Media Support. The key parameters in the report are technology, consumer market developments and increased internationalisation – pointing specifically to:
- How young media users increasingly make use of IP-based media, while older users are more likely to use print media (in addition to radio and television)
- How search engines and social media are the most used platforms amongst Danish users on the Internet
- How there still needs to be established profitable payment models for news via IP media
- How circulation and readership is declining for most print media
- How the local advertising market is under extreme pressure from foreign players
The report furthermore addresses the consequences of maintaining a status quo where certain IP based media and journals are not currently eligible for subsidisation. This is despite the fact that in many cases these platforms play a crucial role in an enlightened democracy. These kinds of considerations correspond with the overall aims of the report, which are to be seen in the title as well, i.e. looking primarily upon the democratic role of media. This is further emphasised in the concrete purpose of the report:
- to promote social and cultural information;
- to strengthen the democratic debate in society; and
- to ensure versatility and diversity in Danish media.
Indeed, powerful media are seen as essential in supporting democratic values and society through independent production and dissemination of news, as well as information that encourages information seeking and participation in public debates. It is therefore the Committee's conclusion that media support should primarily been seen as support to democracy. Finally, the committee puts forward three potential models to achieve these objectives:
- A platform-specific model (adaptation of the current platform specific media support, including IP media – but with separate support schemes);
- Partly platform-neutral model (radio and television and the ideal magazines continue to receive support from platform specific schemes, while print medial and IP based media are supported by a platform-neutral scheme); and
- Platform-neutral model (a main support scheme divided onto two separate schemes of production, one for commercial media and non for non-commercial media).
Last update: March, 2012
There is no official statutory document that nominates Danish as the national language for the Kingdom of Denmark. Danish language policy is not meant to be normative but to serve as a recommendation and guide, according to the Danish Ministry of Culture. This was the purpose of the Danish language authority (Dansk Sprognævn), a scientific institution founded in 1955 which sets out guidelines and gives advice on the use of the language, but does not attempt to control the evolution of the Danish language, which has been spoken for more than a thousand years.
In 2008, a report (Sprog til tiden) was launched by the Ministry of Culture to strengthen the position of the Danish language. The revitalisation of the Danish language is one of the underpinning themes that are highlighted in the government's cultural policy, elected in November 2007. The focus of this report and the initiatives resulting from it is promoting the Danish language. The committee wishes to promote joy and pride in the Danish language through three concrete initiatives:
- strengthen the Danish language in the home, day-care and schools;
- strengthen the Danish language in the universities; and
- a campaign to increase the focus on the joy related to knowing and using the Danish language was launched in September 2010 at http://www.gangisproget.dk.
The first point has led to action in schools accompanying the government's focus on good writing and reading skills, including for the new Danes.
Several concrete initiatives have been taken in recent years including:
- the increasing focus on cultural heritage in Danish cultural policy today has led to several governmental initiatives: http://www.ordnet.dk and http://www.sproget.dk (2007) in order to present the Danish language and its history to its speakers;
- Danish schools are obliged to instruct their pupils in the Danish language. Private independent schools, also, must teach in Danish, according to the Act on Private Independent Schools (Friskoleloven). Up to 10 private independent schools have been granted permission to operate, in some school departments, in English, German or French. Only 4 schools are allowed simply to instruct in English, German and French throughout the whole school year;
- since 2002, Denmark has followed the EU-regulation in which all citizens from the European Union are entitled to receive instruction in their native language. This also includes citizens from the Faeroe Islands, Greenland and the Danish minority in northern Germany. Native language teaching for Danes living south of the Danish border in Germany has been regulated since the Copenhagen-Bonn Declaration from 1955. Instruction in the native language for all citizens living in Denmark does not include refugees or other new Danish for instance from Africa or the Middle East. However, instruction is possible if the individual municipality decides to offer citizens courses in their native language;
- Danish pupils are introduced to Danish in old and new forms, but rarely to different dialects from individual regions of Denmark. Norwegian and Swedish are being studied also, in order to introduce the Danish pupils to their Scandinavian heritage (last verified by the Nordic Council at their meeting in November 2006: Declaration on Nordic Language Policy);
- the influence from the English-speaking world is one of the main ongoing debates concerning the Danish language and culture. In opposition to other Nordic countries like Finland, Norway and Iceland, Danish authorities rarely recommend Danish words instead of English terms that are appearing in the language; and
- In 2010, the political debate concerning language has evolved around the issue of whether there should be legislation concerning the influence of the English language at the universities and other higher education institutions.
Last update: March, 2012
One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, amended in October 2011, is to improve gender equality in the cultural field (see chapter 2.1).
According to the Act on Gender Equality (from 2004), all public authorities are obliged to work towards gender equality in public administration (see http://www.lige.dk/files/PDF/bekendtgorelse.pdf). The Ministry of Culture is – together with all the Danish ministries – obliged to observe the intentions in the Act on Gender Equality. The Ministry of Culture has contributed with a range of projects.
In 2005, the Ministry of Culture launched a report on gender equality in the Ministry itself and 22 cultural institutions. The report shows that the number of women in leading positions in Danish public institutions rose in the period from 2003. The Ministry of Culture itself has a low ranking compared to other public departments, due to very few leading female employees in the cultural institutions (see http://www.ligestillingidanmark.dk/data/htmltexts/rapport_kulturministeriet.pdf).
This information will be published as soon as possible.
Last update: March, 2012
The only official recognised minority in Denmark is the German minority living immediately north of the Danish-German Border. It is difficult to determine the precise size of the minority, for the control of matters relating to the minority has not been permitted since the Copenhagen-Bonn Declaration in 1955. However, it is estimated that the minority has 15-20 000 members in North Schleswig. Of a total population of 250 000 in the region, this number corresponds to a segment of 6-8% of the population.
The German minority in North Schleswig runs its own private schools and a wide spectrum of social and cultural institutions. The minority, although marked by the many changes of history, today plays an important part in the borderland. Previous conflicts have been overcome, and the German minority, together with the minorities south of the border, is a good example of peaceful co-existence of minorities and majorities in Europe.
Bund Deutscher Nordschleswiger (the association of North Schleswigers) is the German minority's central organisation. Its objective is to promote and develop further the German language and culture in North Schleswig. At the same time, the minority wants to act as a bridge between Denmark and Germany and as a bridge to Europe (Further information see: http://www.bdn.dk).
Within the framework of the United Kingdom of Denmark (Rigsfællesskabet), the Faeroe Islands and Greenland have extensive freedom to improve, manage and finance their internal affairs, i.e. public cultural policy. The Faeroe Islands is an autonomous nation within the realm of the Danish National State of Denmark, governed by the Lagtinget (Parliament) and Landsstyret (the government). Pursuant to the Faeroese Home Rule Act of 1948, the government is in charge of cultural affairs. Consequently, the parliament legislates, while administration of the cultural fields is the responsibility of the Faeroese Home Rule Government.
Similarly, Greenland is an autonomous nation within the realm of Denmark. By establishment of the Home Rule Government in 1979, Greenland took over the responsibility for its own libraries, archives, museums, art institutions, high schools, Greenland Radio / TV and the church. The common constitution of the United Kingdom of Denmark primarily manifests itself in the common royal house, common currency and common foreign policy.
On 21 June 2004, The Danish and the Greenlandic Home Rule Government appointed The Greenland-Danish Commission on Self-Governance. The purpose was to consider how the Greenlandic authorities could take over more competences, especially in the economic field, from Denmark (see: http://www.nanoq.gl, http://www.stm.dk, http://www.um.dk).
The Greenlandic self-government system
On 21 June 2009, the Law on Greenland's Self Government (Self-Government Act) came into force, which superseded the Greenland Home Rule system. The Act is based on the Greenlandic-Danish Self-Government Commission report No. 1497 from 2008 which is available at http://www.nanoq.gl.
Before the new law came into effect, a consultative referendum was held in Greenland on 25 November 2008. Of the votes cast, were 75.5% and 23.6% opposed the introduction of self-government. (Author: the last part highlighted is not clear, please clarify.
The new law increases the Greenlandic people's autonomy to the greatest extent possible within the existing national community. The Self-Government Act's preamble recognises that the Greenlandic people are a people under international law with the right to self-determination. The Act is accordingly based on an agreement between the Greenland Self-Government and the Danish government as equal partners.
A main objective of the introduction of self-government has been to enable a transfer of additional powers and thus responsibility for Greenland authorities, where this is constitutionally possible, and the principle of conformity between rights and responsibilities.
The Autonomy Law recognises the Greenlandic language as the official language of Greenland. Danish must still be used in public affairs and in public administration. The question of instruction in Danish is not regulated by the Autonomy Law, but it is assumed that instruction in Danish and other relevant languages would qualify Greenlandic youth for further education in Denmark and other countries.
Under the Home Rule Act, Greenland has already taken over the legislative and administrative authority in a significant proportion of areas, such as cultural policy, that affect the Greenlandic people's daily lives.
The new Autonomy Law implies that Greenland may decide to acquire a new set of responsibilities, including procedural law (including the establishment of courts), prisons, police force, corporate accounting and auditing, the mining industry, aviation, personal law, family and succession law, immigration and border controls, workplace law, and financial regulation and supervision, as listed in section II of the Annex to the Autonomy Law.
In 2008, Denmark received refugees from around 70 countries in the world. The biggest population groups are from the former Republic of Yugoslavia, Somalia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Iran and the stateless Lebanese from Palestine. In total, 8.4% of the Danish population have a foreign background; this amounts to 452 095 people – 39% of whom are Danish citizens - of a total population of 5 million.
One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together amended October 2011 is to implement a more open identity and integration policy (see chapter 2.1).
This also poses new challenges to the formation of art policy: How can arts policies, on the one hand, take into account the different traditions and form cultural expressions in multicultural societies and, at the same time, avoid a cultural stigmatisation of minority groups?
Many second generation migrants experience cultural stigmatisation, often within families, but also by a romanticised cultural policy which concentrates on their original cultural patterns and folkloristic artistic expressions. Artists with a different cultural background, to a high degree, prefer to be regarded on an equal footing with other citizens, but also wish to experience the right to participate in cultural life, to protect and develop cultural and linguistic identities, to create their own artistic expressions etc. But most of the migrant artists do not want to be locked into cultural or artistic norms of the past, by their families or by a regressive, stigmatising multicultural cultural policy. A romanticising cultural policy can be displayed by their own ethno-national minority community as much as by the national artistic conventions of the majority culture. This emerges strongly in, for example, the young Greenland artists who were forced into an ethno-national straight-jacket, knitted by the first Greenland cultural policy after home rule was established in 1979.
These huge challenges to cultural policy have been integrated, in 2008, in the Danish Arts Councils new plan of action 2007-2011. The main priority decided by the Councils, to meet these challenges and to create a coherent and progressive development of Danish Arts Policy for the future, is among other priorities to include more artists with a non-Danish ethnic background (see chapter 4.1.2).
Other targeted measures and support programmes to give migrants and minorities a voice in and access to the cultural landscape are:
- setting up the Council for Ethnic Minorities (Rådet for Etniske Minoriteter / REM). The council serves as an advisor for integration in the local municipalities and it consists of ethnic minorities that are contributing to the creation of prosperous dialogues and exchange of experiences for mutual inspiration in the local area. The council has shown great potential in educating new citizens on how Danish citizenship works in practice; and
- the Danish Royal Theatre's initiative to support refugees and Danes with an immigrant background. With a donation from the Bikuben Foundation, tickets can be purchased for reduced prices, in order to attract audiences who would not normally visit the theatre very often. In spite of this well-meaning initiative, audiences have not grown in this sector.
See also chapter 2.5.1, chapter 2.1, chapter 3.1, chapter 4.1.1 and chapter 2.5.2.
Last update: March, 2012
One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, amended in October 2011, combined with the governments initiative under the Danish Presidency of the EU, January – July 2012 (see chapter 1.4), is to improve a more open identity and integration policy and strengthen social cohesion of non-ethnic defined terms of citizenship (see chapter 2.1).
Social cohesion at national and local level is an underlying consideration in most major parts of Danish cultural policy and in the general political debate in Denmark. Almost every Danish Minister of Culture has put special emphasis on the common Danish cultural heritage as a way of understanding oneself as a people - and as means to meet other cultures with an open mind in an ever more globalised and multicultural world. Today, one of the overall aims in Danish cultural policy is to revitalise Danish cultural heritage and to stimulate and consolidate Danish culture and identity (see chapter 2.1). Besides cultural heritage, social cohesion is also a topic in recent cultural politics regarding art and sports initiatives taken by the Danish Ministry of Culture.
An explicit policy in the field of social cohesion has yet not been formulated, but new initiatives have social cohesion as an underlining theme:
- several initiatives have been taken to strengthen the promotion of the cultural heritage in Danish museums. Free entrance is provided for children and young people in all officially recognised museums, as well as in the National Museum and in the collection of the Museum of Art. This increased the total number of visitors, in 2006, to the two national museums, by 27% and 57% respectively and the statistics show the number of visitors is still rising. The purpose of free entrance has been to attract the attention of a group of visitors who wouldn't normally visit museums. Also, the government has set aside 40 million DKK a year for communication initiatives of the museums. The figure was set in 2007 and has been on the Budget since.
- a new strategy Culture for All was launched in January 2010 to strengthen culture outside the Danish capital. The purpose is also to focus on culture as a coherent factor in the local and regional environment in provincial municipalities and towns (see chapter 2.1). The strategy focuses especially on non-users (ikke-brugere); this includes the new Danes actively in cultural policy for the first time. The goal is to create social cohesion for all groups in society by creating more possibilities and openness for those who do not use the cultural institutions.
- Sports are also a part of the initiatives by the Danish Ministry of Culture that are developed to create a stronger sense of social cohesion. In 2009, a report on sports "Idræt for alle" was launched. It includes a wide range of suggestions to the sports world on how to incorporate children and the youth who normally do not do sports.
- The libraries also play a significant role, especially by inclusion of new Danes. Since 2008, libraries have had the opportunity to start state financed community centres in areas with a high degree of new Danish citizens.
This information will be published as soon as possible.
Last update: March, 2012
To sum up,the Danish debate on cultural politics has focussed on the following general topics in 2010 and 2011:
- how can cultural politics contribute to secure the cohesion of a society challenged with a growing number of cultural minorities, internally, and multicultural global cultural influences from the outside? The question is about sovereignty of the people and thereby the relation between the constitutional state and democracy, identity and the nation. The transformation of public cultural policy to identity policy and to cultural policy as an instrument for social cohesion has been encouraged, for instance in the new cultural strategy Culture for all, launched on 8 December 2009 and the working programme Knowledge, Growth, Wealth and Welfare, launched by the former Danish VKO-government on 24 February 2010 (see chapter 2.1)
- One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, amended in October 2011, combined with the government’s initiative under the Danish Presidency of the EU, January – July 2012 (see chapter 1.4), is to improve a more open identity and integration policy and strengthen social cohesion for non-ethnic defined terms of citizenship (see chapter 2.1).
- How is it possible to instrumentalise arts for economic growth? What cultural and economic potential do the creative industries contain? Does the encouragement of the economic rationales in Danish cultural policy have impact on the production of art and the role of art in society? (see chapter 2.1)
- How can digital media and digital communication be used to enhance user-generated innovation and get more users to visit institutional spaces? (see chapter 2.1 and chapter 2.5.3)
- How can the state establish a balance between decentralised and centralised levels of Danish cultural politics, which can ensure both viable cultural institutions locally and central / regional state-funded cultural institutions that can contribute to the positioning of Danish culture abroad and to the strengthening of social cohesion internally – that is to say: strengthening the Danish identity in the new global reality (see chapter 2.1).
Other questions raised in the public debate are:
- is the arm's length principle, in spite of the formal maintenance of the system, being eroded by the new top-down programmes organised by the Ministry or its agencies? Today, under 10% of the total cultural funding is subordinated to arm's length evaluation;
- similar critique has been aimed at the systematic use of contract management in relation to cultural institutions, which, according to the critics, inevitably implies an asymmetric development, because the experiences and point of views of cultural life are being subordinated to the desires and needs of the political and economic system of power; and
- is the goal of cultural politics to strengthen the national identity through canons of culture and other new initiatives to promote Danish cultural heritage, including the ambition of connecting national heritage issues to the experience economy, being implemented at the cost of a cosmopolitan definition of culture with emphasis on multiplicity? In particular, artists' organisations have argued that the role of art in modern society is being eroded if the arts are subordinated to national and economic reductionism.
One of the main priorities in the new governmental programme A Denmark That Stands Together, amended in October 2011, combined with the government’s initiative under the Danish Presidency of the EU, January – July 2012 (see chapter 1.4), is to improve a more open identity policy and strengthen social cohesion for non-ethnic defined terms of citizenship (see chapter 2.1).