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16 gru 2013 · The concepts of niche, genre, and classification are defining and central concepts that underpin theoretical explanations and empirical studies of creative industries. The literature on niche views markets as an economic resource primarily comprising consumers.
The DCMS classifies enterprises and occupations as creative according to what the enterprise primarily produces, and what the worker primarily does. Thus, a company which produces records would be classified as belonging to the music industrial sector, and a worker who plays piano would be classified as a musician.
Arts Council England welcomes this review of the classification and measurement of the creative industries and supports the movement towards a more robust and replicable methodology for classifying and measuring the creative industries.
The arts are a vehicle through which human beings cultivate distinct social, cultural, and individual identities while transmitting values, impressions, judgements, ideas, visions, spiritual meanings, patterns of life, and experiences across time and space.
This framework helps to integrate findings of consumption surveys and to explain the emergence of new artistic genres as a form of ritual classification. Societies' artistic classification systems vary along four dimensions: differentiation, hierarchy, universality, and boundary strength.
The U.S. Census Bureau classifies business establishments and enterprises into industries using its North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Arts and cultural industries are those NAICS codes that represent organizations that are engaged in the production of arts and culture-related goods and services.
According to the DMCS classification, these industries include categories such as advertising, architecture, art and antiques, video games, crafts, design, fashion, film, music, live performance, publishing, software, television, and radio.