Access and admission charges to museums: a case study
Citation:
O'Hagan, John W. and Duffy, Christopher. 'Access and admission charges to museums: a case study'. - Dublin: Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland,Vol. XXVII, Pt. 1, 1993/1994, pp125-152Download Item:
Abstract:
The principle
of free admission to national cultural institutions, especially museums, has prevailed
in Britain and Ireland for over two centuries. Charges to the British Museum were
proposed as far back as 1784, and again in 1929. Charges were actually introduced
there in 1974, but abandoned three months later after a change of government. The
pressure to introduce charges has resumed, especially now that charges have been
introduced in the National History Museum in London and in many branches of
other national museums in Britain as well as in several national museums in
Continental Europe.Some fundamental questions concerning the nature and role of a national museum
need addressing before the issue of admission charges can properly be addressed.
With this in mind, Sections 2 and 3 of this paper will link back to the earlier work
cited above and look again at some of the important questions raised therein. These
relate to the functions of museums in general and what the raison d'etre of a national
museum is and how it relates to these functions4. It will be seen in that discussion
that a key objective of a national historical museum (which is what the National
Museum in Ireland, the National Museum in Denmark and the British Museum in
London are), and indeed of similar national institutions, is the achievement of a
satisfactory level of access to the collections of the museum and a consideration of
this issue forms the subject matter of the next two sections of the paper. In Section 4
it will be asked what is meant by a satisfactory level of access, while Section 5 will
examine the available evidence in relation to access to the National Museum of
Ireland. The question of charging for entry to the Museum is then fully discussed in
Section 6, both in terms of the experience with charging for entry to similar
institutions in Ireland to date and in terms of how, if at all, it would impact on the
goal of access. Section 7 concludes the paper.
Description:
Read before the Society, 20 January 1994
Author: O'Hagan, John W.; Duffy, Christopher
Publisher:
Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of IrelandType of material:
Journal articleCollections
Series/Report no:
Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of IrelandVol. XXVII, Pt. 1, 1993/1994
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Full text availableKeywords:
Museums - Admission charges, Galleries - Admission charges, Cultural Institutions - Admission chargesISSN:
00814776Metadata
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