Live DMA
  • OUR NETWORK
    • ABOUT LIVE DMA
    • MEMBERSHIP
    • CONTACT
  • RESEARCH
  • RESOURCES
    • LIVE MUSIC OBSERVATORY
    • DATABASE
    • GLOSSARY
  • OUR VOICE IN THE EU
  • EU SUPPORT
  • AGENDA
  • CONTACT
Home » tools » Webinar Agent of Change
  • Webinar Agent of Change

    Published on 14 February 2019

    On the 12th of February 2019, Live DMA hosted a webinar on the question of the Agent of Change principle with Mark Davyd, musical activist and CEO of Music Venue Trust who succeeded in implementing the Agent of Change principle in the UK law in August 2018.

    What is the Agent of Change?

    Agent of Change says that the person or business responsible for the change is responsible for managing the impact of the change. This means that an apartment block to be built near an established live music venue or club would have to pay for soundproofing, while a live music venue or club opening in a residential area would be responsible for the costs.

    Until last summer, UK law was saying that whoever is making a nuisance is always responsible for that nuisance. No matter how long it has existed, or whether there were any historic instances of the same noise being a nuisance, if somebody moved right next door to the noise and decided it was a nuisance, the UK law was supporting it.

    Agent of Change has been trialled in Australia and is now effective in the UK. This initiative might give echo to similar challenges faced in different European cities and countries.

    Agent of Change webinar session hosted by Live DMA and Mark Davyd from Music Venue Trust

    Highlights of the webinar:

    1’33: Introduction to the Agent of Change concept

    4’23: How the UK Agent of Change campaign was launched

    16’50: First Q&A session

    25’30: Implementing the Agent of Change concept in law

    31’54: Resources needed to launch an Agent of Change campaign

    36’: Next steps regarding Agent of Change in the UK

    38’50: Second Q&A session

    52’55: Is Agent of Change adaptable to every territory?

    56’40: Advice from Mark Davyd should you want to implement Agent of Change at your local level

    To go further…

    Here is more information on the Agent of Change principle should you want to dive deeper into the subject:

    • Resource from Music Venue Trust on Agent of Change can be found here
    • The White Paper on the Agent of Change principle written by Music Victoria, the Australian network of live music for the region of Victoria, who initiated the implementation of the Agent of Change principle and was an inspiration for the Music Venue Trust campaign.

    [button url=”https://live-dma.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Agent-of-Change-White-Paper-Music-Victoria-20181-1.pdf” target=”_blank »]Download the White Paper on Agent of Change by Music Victoria (2018)[/button]

    • A NME video report of the protest that took place in front of the British Parliament in defense of the Agent of Change principle. Many civilians, live music professionals and politics attended the protest alongside some famous British musicians. Popular mobilization is also a means of action. If interested, here is the list of Music Venue Trust’s patrons
    NME video report on the Agent of change protest that took place in front of Westminster in the UK
    • Articles from the British press focusing on what’s next regarding Agent of Change:

    CityMetric – “The UK Planning System Finally Recognizes the ‘Agent of Change’ Principle. So Now What?” (11/23/2018)
    One article that explores the next steps regarding the preservation of live music spaces

    The Conversation – “‘Agent of Change’ protects music venues from noise complaints, but won’t stop them from closing” (01/29/2018)
    One article that celebrates the Agent of Change principle but still acknowledges that it is not a miracle solution and that live music spaces still need to be defended and protected.

    For any question or remark on Agent of Change, do not hesitate to contact Mark Davyd or Live DMA coordinator Audrey Guerre.

    Audrey Guerre – Live DMA : audrey.guerre@live-dma.eu

    Mark Davyd – Music Venue Trust : mark@musicvenuetrust.com

  • Artistic & Ethical Policies

    Ethic charters, guidelines, manifestos, special programmes or mission statements are a great way of developing humane policies around the values communities would like to see in society. By making explicit their values, live music scenes commit to them. They state who they are and who they are going to be for the next years. They…

  • COVID-19 Press Corner

    A selection of articles on Corona & the live music sector: Indie venues fight back against coronavirus, IQ Magazine– 19/03/2020 The Value Of Music In Our New Age Of Coronavirus, Shain Shapiro (Sound Diplomacy)– 17/03/2020 Here’s A Music & Cultural Cities Framework We Can All Adopt,Shain Shapiro (Sound Diplomacy) – 25/03/2020 Supporting local venues: ‘The rooms might…

  • Statement: Citizen-­oriented Cohesion Policy with a prominent place for culture  

    In reaction to the European Commission’s proposal for the future EU Cohesion policy, the European Alliance for Culture and the Arts advocates for a citizen-oriented approach of the Cohesion Policy supporting active citizenship and the involvement by communities and individuals. The statement highlights the essential role of culture and the creative sectors and calls on…

European network for live music venues,
clubs & festivals

Get in touch

  • OUR NETWORK
    • ABOUT LIVE DMA
    • MEMBERSHIP
    • CONTACT
  • RESEARCH
  • RESOURCES
    • LIVE MUSIC OBSERVATORY
    • DATABASE
    • GLOSSARY
  • OUR VOICE IN THE EU
  • EU SUPPORT
  • AGENDA
  • CONTACT

© 2024 Live DMA. All right reserved, no reproduction allowed. Legal notice & Privacy policy