Affiliation:
1. Universidad de Guadalajara
Abstract
Creative activities have positioned themselves as an ally to regional and local development, considering that it can contribute to other activities that are in a territory. These activities have been differentiated from cultural activities, because they are developed due to market demand and competition from economic sectors. This is how it is affirmed that cultural activities play a fundamental role for the development of creativity, but creative activities help the development of other activities, being a support such as productive or advanced services. The grouping of these activities in the country and specifically in Jalisco, it is observed that only in some states there is a relative concentration. In the case of Jalisco, the agglomeration is manifested in the metropolitan municipalities, in addition to Puerto Vallarta, where the latter has the effect of the appearance of these activities due to tourism development.
Reference35 articles.
1. Asheim B. T., R. A., Boschma y P. Cooke (2007). Constructing regional advantage: platform policy based on related variety and differentiated knowledge bases. Regional Studies, 45(7), 893904, DOI: 10.1080/00343404.2010.543126.
2. Bakhshi, H., McVittie, E. y Simmie, J. (2008). Creating Innovation: do the creative industries support innovation in the wider economy? NESTA Reporte de investigación.
3. Bathelt, H. (2002). The Re-emergence of a Media Industry Cluster in Leipzig, European Planning Studies, Vol. 10, No 5 583-611, DOI: 10.1080 / 09654310220145341
4. Becattini G. (2002). Del distrito marshalliano a la teoría del distrito contemporánea. Una breve reconstrucción critica. En Revista Investigaciones Regionales. No 1, otoño 9-32. Asociación Española de ciencia Regional. Madrid España.
5. Bellandi, M. (2003). Some Remarks on Marshallian External Economies and Industrial Tendencies. En Arena, R. The Economics of Alfred Marshall. Revisiting Marshall´s Legacy Edición Quere, M.