The Creative Women’s Association is developing the Women’s Economic Participation Index and Stepped Economic Care model — a new policy framework recognising domestic and care load as structural barriers to workforce participation and supporting women to move from economic precarity to stable employment or enterprise creation
Tag: cultural workforce
The Cultural Work Theory
Contemporary culture should be understood as a field of social innovation. Cultural work — including making, design, education, and community practice — generates new ways of organising knowledge, transmitting skills, and strengthening social participation. In this framework, creativity functions as a descriptive quality of practice, while culture operates as the governing system through which social continuity and innovation occur.
Culture First
Culture is often described through creative expression, but deeper systems organise how knowledge, skills and traditions move through society. Cultural Work Theory reframes creativity as a quality of practice within the broader system of culture, positioning contemporary culture as a field of social innovation and social infrastructure.
The Future of Women’s Work Is Already Here
The future of women’s work is not simply about participation rates or automation forecasts. The Creative Women’s Association Verified Cultural Workforce Registry connects skilled women practitioners in cultural, craft, and manufacturing fields with real, paid work — making high-skill labour visible, trusted, and workforce-ready across Australia.