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Distributed for Intellect Ltd

Urban Music Governance

What Busking Can Teach Us about Data, Policy and Our Cities

Distributed for Intellect Ltd

Urban Music Governance

What Busking Can Teach Us about Data, Policy and Our Cities

This insightful investigation of busking culture confronts relevant truths about power relations, policy, and inequality in contemporary cities across the globe.

What happens when precarious urban cultural laborers take data collection, laws, and policymaking into their own hands? Buskers have been part of our cities for hundreds of years, but they remain invisible to governments and in datasets. From nuisance to public art, this cultural practice can help us understand the politics of data collection, archives, regulatory frameworks, and urban planning. Busking also responds to underlying questions on the boundaries of the rights to the city, and who has a voice in shaping how our cities are planned and governed.

A transnational exploration of street performance, Urban Music Governance examines the intricate limits of legality, data visibility, and resistance from the perspective of those working at the social and regulatory margins of society. Based on a decade of fieldwork in Rio de Janeiro and Montreal, this book offers a lively account of why such an often-overlooked practice matters today.

By investigating the role of busking in contemporary society, Urban Music Governance presents an original interdisciplinary study that exposes how power dynamics in policymaking decide issues of access—and exclusion—around us, above and below ground.

208 pages | 18 halftones | 6.69 x 9.61 | © 2025

Urban Music Studies

Art: Art--General Studies

Music: General Music


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Table of Contents

Foreword By Will Straw

Acknowledgments

Introduction: What does street performance teach us about cities?

 

Part I | Numbers and norms

  1. More than numbers: Counting, categorizing and describing buskers across time
  1. Regulation: Engaging with (dis)order in everyday life

 

Part II | Above ground and beyond regulation

  1. Legitimation: The blurred boundaries between policy and control
  1. Disputes: Busking as public service and law-making

 

Part III | Going underground, being understood

  1. Disobedience: Lawbreakers and talented stars

 

Postface - Pandemic, digitalisation and evidence-based policy

Bibliography

Index

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