For a culture of conflict Image: Creator: picture alliance / REUTERS | AMR ABDALLAH DALSH For a culture of conflict Landau, Friederike In this discussion paper, Friederike Landau-Donnelly explains why conflicts in cultural policy should be seen not as disruptive factors but as resources for shaping democracy. Conflicts are omnipresent in the cultural sector – from disputes over funding decisions to debates about artistic freedom. In times of new cultural policy disputes and a crumbling social consensus on the value of art and culture, cultural geographer Friederike Landau-Donnelly advocates a conscious, power-critical and difference-sensitive culture of conflict. The discussion paper shows how implicit and explicit cultural policies influence conflict dynamics and presents a practical tool for identifying and productively addressing conflicts over values and resources. The analysis makes it clear: Why conflicts should be understood as a resource for democratic negotiation processes. How an agonistic approach can make tensions constructively useful. Six specific recommendations on how cultural policy and promotion can help to shape conflicts in an inclusive and future-oriented manner. The paper is aimed at cultural policy actors from administration, politics, associations and institutions – and at anyone who not only wants to endure conflicts in the cultural field, but also wants to use them productively. About the author Prof. Dr. Friederike Landau-Donnelly (she/her) is a political theorist, urban sociologist and cultural geographer. She is currently a visiting professor of cultural and social geography at Humboldt University in Berlin and is writing a monograph on conflict museums in Canada and India. Among other things, she co-edited the handbook Kultur politik (2024), Konfliktuelle Kulturpolitik (2023) and [Un]Grounding – Post Foundational Geographies (2021). Friederike Landau-Donnelly writes poetry as #PoeticAcademic. Image: Creator: picture alliance / REUTERS | AMR ABDALLAH DALSH Contact Image: Creator: bundesfoto/FES/Kurc Dr. Johannes Crückeberg 030 26935-8332 Johannes.Crueckeberg(at)fes.de