Festivalization of Cities: Arts-led Urban Branding and Social Impacts
Festivalization has emerged as a defining feature of contemporary urban development, whereby cities strategically deploy festivals, cultural events, and artistic spectacles to strengthen urban branding, stimulate economic growth, and enhance global visibility. This study examines the relationship between festivalization, arts-led urban branding, and their associated social, spatial, and economic impacts. Drawing on comparative global perspectives, the paper explores how festivals function as instruments of cultural policy and urban governance, enabling cities to reposition themselves within increasingly competitive global networks. The study analyses historical trajectories of festivalization, from traditional cultural celebrations to contemporary mega-events and creative-city strategies, highlighting the growing integration of festivals into urban regeneration and cultural-development agendas. Particular attention is given to the mechanisms of arts-led branding, including strategic branding, collective branding, thematic festivals, and stakeholder coalitions that shape city identities and public perceptions. The paper further investigates the social impacts of festivalization, emphasizing issues of participation, equity, community cohesion, and cultural inclusion, while also addressing concerns regarding socio-spatial inequality, exclusion, and cultural commodification. Economic dimensions such as tourism development, local business growth, labor precarity, and creative-industry expansion are critically examined alongside governance structures, policy instruments, and funding models that sustain festival-led urban development. Through case studies from cities in both the Global North and Global South, the analysis demonstrates that festivalization produces uneven outcomes shaped by local governance, economic conditions, and cultural priorities. The study concludes that although artsled urban branding can generate visibility, cultural vitality, and economic opportunities, it also risks reinforcing gentrification, cultural dilution, and sustainability challenges if not accompanied by inclusive cultural policies and long-term urban planning strategies. Ultimately, festivalization represents both an opportunity and a challenge for contemporary cities seeking to balance global competitiveness with local cultural integrity and social equity.