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Cultural sustainability of the arts through cross cultural market segmentation

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journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Wendy Kennedy, J Hall
The cultural characteristics attributed to individuals in their country of birth are likely to change through immigration and acculturation processes taking place in the host country. Immigrants are likely to develop their own unique cultural styles through a blending of their old culture and the host culture. With slightly less than half of the population born overseas or with at least one parent born overseas, and with some 200 languages Australia has one of the most cosmopolitan populations in the world, with a relatively small population of 20 million. This paper considers the cross cultural nature of the Australian population and the sustainability of culture through the Arts. This paper also considers the marketing of the arts from a cross cultural segmentation perspective. In so doing the paper identifies segmentation issues associated with cross cultural segmentation.

History

Journal

International journal of environmental, cultural, economic and social sustainability

Volume

2

Issue

3

Pagination

21 - 30

Publisher

Common Ground Publishing

Location

Altona, Vic.

ISSN

1832-2077

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Common Ground Publishing

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