FIND RESOURCES
Here you will find all of our resources collected together. Find a resource based on a geography, issue, cultural practice, or impact by using the menus below.
Cultural Organizing Working Definition and Framework

Cultural Organizing for Community Change, Frankfort, KY
Cultural Organizing for Community Change (Frankfort, KY) provided a space where artists, activists, cultural workers, organizers and educators from across Kentucky came together to strengthen their relationships, and deepen their capacity to use the tools of creativity, imagination, and culture for social justice organizing. This participatory workshop featured case studies, tools, strategies, networking and relationship building.
Culture, Planning, and Community Engagement Course
This experiential mini-course for Pratt Institute's Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development investigated arts and culture, broadly defined, as a critical part of envisioning and building an equitable and sustainable Chicago. Through site visits, tours, and conversations with practitioners and policymakers we explored the intersection between arts, culture, media and participatory planning.

Creative Engagement and a Moral Economy for All

Stories & Placemaking
Cultural practice and artistic expression breathe life into communities.They create opportunities for individuals and institutions to transform their sense of self and relationships with one another, and share their local traditions and ways of being.
This conference call looks at the power of place-based culture to create community narratives, advance racial and economic equity, promote participatory democracy, and foster self-determination and inclusion in rural communities. We will hear from five presenters about culturally-based work in a diverse range of contexts addressing themes that include traditional practice, opportunities for young people as emerging leaders, cultural economies, ecological and cultural stewardship and cross-sector partnerships.
Call Organizers:
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Amalia Deloney, Arts & Democracy Project
Lori Pouier, First Peoples Fund
Walter Mack, Penn Center
Ada Smith, STAY Project
Bineshi Albert, Southwest Organizing Project
Matthew Fluharty, Art of the Rural and Rural Arts & Culture Working Group

Cultural Organizing Weekend in New Orleans, Louisiana

Placemaking and Belonging
Wednesday, February 13, 2013 at 3pm EST, 12pm PST
Cosponsored by Arts & Democracy Project, National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture, and Network of Ensemble Theaters.
We hear a lot about creative placemaking these days. Some like the term and others don't. On this conference call, presenters discussed what sorts of creative placemaking practices strengthen self-determination and belonging within a community. The call illustrated the power of place-based arts and culture as an integral part of equitable, democratic, and culturally vital communities and explored placemaking in the digital sphere.
Call Organizers:
Aggie Ebrahimi Bazaz, NAMAC
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Co-Facilitators:
Karen Mack, LA Commons
Kathie deNobriga, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Presenters:
Gretjen Clausing, PhillyCAM
Roberto Bedoya,Tucson Pima Arts Council
Robert Gipe, Higher Ground, Appalachian Program at Southeast Kentucky Community & Technical College
Anusha Venkataraman, El Puente Greenlight District
Caron Atlas, Naturally Occurring Cultural District Working Group (NOCD-NY) and the Arts & Democracy Project
Respondent:
Maria Jackson, Claremont Graduate University
- Creative Placemaking and the Politics of Belonging and Dis-Belonging by Roberto Bedoya
Northeast , West , Southwest , Community / Regional Development , Multi / Inter-disciplinary , Community Engagement , Policy / Law Change
Program

Making Change in Chinatown

Relief & Recovery: The Transformative Power of Arts & Culture Conference Call
We all know the power of arts and culture to heal and transform, connect people and build community. In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, artists and cultural organizers are stepping up to use their creativity to rebuild the city and rebuild community. They are helping people tell their stories and sing together, offering cultural and wellness activities in evacuation shelters, organizing benefits, and providing leadership to recovery efforts. They've helped to restore dignity, build community, make connections, and heal.
Call Organizer
Caron Atlas, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Facilitator
Kathie DeNobriga, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Presenters
Michael Premo, Occupy Sandy
Rachel Falcone, Sandy Storyline
Caron Atlas, Armory Wellness Center
Casey Shae, Armory Wellness Center (artists' experience)
Melanie Cohn, Council on the Arts & Humanities for Staten Island
Marina Tsaplina, artist project for Occupy Sandy
Jessie Reilly, Timebanks NYC
Lili Trenkova, Dixon Place Benefit
Mimi Pickering, Creative Recovery Arts Corp. (on behalf of Feral Arts)
Stephanie McKee, Junebug Productions (New Orleans, LA)
Shereitte C. Stokes, Cradleboardfoundation (New Orleans, LA)
International , Democracy , Human Rights / Social Justice , Multi / Inter-disciplinary
Program
Humanity After the Storm
Election Call: This is What Democracy Looks Like
This call highlighted the great work that is happening in civic participation and arts and culture, and shared opportunities to get involved. It addressed elections, but even more so the ongoing work that is happening to strengthen our democracy. The call featured presenters from across the country who are working to protect voting rights and make sure that those who have been historically disconnected from decisionmaking have opportunities to participate. Artists and media makers who are using their creativity to increase inclusion and participation also shared their work. And we heard from people who are working on what happens after the election to make sure that democracy can thrive in our daily lives.
Call Organizer
Caron Atlas, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Facilitator
Kathie deNobriga, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Presenters
Rachel Bishop, League of Young Voters
Richelle DeVoe, National Voter Registration Day
Nelini Stamp, Dream Defenders
Robert Karimi, Peoples Cook
Tracy Sturgivant, State Voices
Laura Muraida, Southwest Workers Union
Erin Potts, Air Traffic Control
Melanie La Rosa, Futura Media Group, America by the Numbers
Andrew Morton, Shop Floor Theatre Company

Ice sculpture by Ligorno/Reese melted at the two political conventions
What Democracy Looks Like
Creative Placemaking and the Politics of Belonging and Dis-belongong

Cultural Organizing for Community Change, Brooklyn, NY
Cultural Organizing for Community Change provided a space where artists, media makers, organizers and policy makers could learn effective ways to deepen their work and strengthen their capacity to use the tools of creativity, imagination and organizing for community change. The workshop included cultural organizing framework, skill building workshops, networking opportunities, and an intergenerational conversation with cultural organizers.

Participatory Budgeting NYC Creative Resources

Forum on Innovative Uses of Space
Email NOCDNY@gmail.com to register.
Northeast , Cultural / Media Policy , Multi / Inter-disciplinary , Community Engagement
Program

Cultural Organizing: Integrating Arts & Culture with Organizing
Cultural organizing is a core practice of the Arts & Democracy Project that exists at the intersection of arts, culture and activism. Cultural organizing integrates arts and culture into organizing strategies. It is also about organizing from a particular tradition, cultural identity, and community of place or worldview to advance social and economic justice. This call will focus on four different approaches to to this practice.
Call organizer/moderator
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Presenters
Carlton Turner, Alternate ROOTS
Michelle Miller, SEIU Artist Residency Project
Myrna Martinez Nateras, Tamejavi Festival & Fellowship
Tufara Muhammad and Marquez Rhyne, Zilphia Horton Cultural Organizing Project

Shifting Culture Making Change

Civil Rights, Human Rights, and A Moral Economy for All

Urban Bush Women at SEIU Convention
Guest Blog by Maria Bauman, Urban Bush Women
The convention felt like a family reunion, with members addressing one another as “Sister” or “Brother,” and receiving warm greetings and rousing affirmations from SEIU president Mary Kay Henry. The Colorado Convention Center had become the largest organizing hub I have ever seen; think of a kitchen or a black church and then magnify times 10,000!

SEIU artist residencies
From the SEIU convention!

California local 521 about to perform
Arts & Democracy Testifies at City Council Hearing

(Photo: Dave Sanders)
Home-buying With Artists in Mind
Culture, Planning, and Community Engagement
Animating Democracy Has a New Web Site!
Animating Democracy's new web site is inspirational, informative, and promotes and connects arts and culture as potent contributors to community, civic, and social change. Animating Democracy co-director Pam Korza takes us on a tour of this great new resource.
Time to Vote!

Creative Engagement: From Civic Dialogue to Direct Democracy
March 7, 2012 3pm EST, 12 noon PST
The conference call focused on creative engagement through civic dialogue, cultural asset mapping, and participatory budgeting.
Call organizers/moderators
Caron Atlas, Arts & Democracy Project
Pam Korza, Animating Democracy
Call Presenters
Town Hall Nation: Michael Rohd, Sojourn Theatre
Participatory Budgeting: Donata Secondo, Participatory Budgeting Project and Caron Atlas, Arts & Democracy Project
Tuscon Meet Yourself, Marbel Alvarez
Welcome to Our New Web Site!
We’re so happy to have this attractive new online home. We think this site is better able to explain our work, share resources, and highlight some of the exciting work our partners and allies are doing in the field.
Read on for an introduction to some of the features you’ll find here...

We've Been Busy!

The Line: An Unemployment Demonstration March 6
Cultural Organizing for Community Recovery
Art is My Occupation

Arts, Culture & Environmental Justice Organizing
January 24th, 2012
This conference call focused on how people and organizations across the country are bringing the power of arts and culture to bear on the environmental devastation that is disproportionately affecting poor communities and communities of color.
Call organizer/moderator
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Speakers
Monique Verdin
Nick Slie Mondo Bizzaro (New Orleans, LA)
Laura Muraida Southwest Workers Union (San Antonio, TX)
Hodari Davis Life Is Living (San Francisco, CA)

Cultural Organizing: Experiences at the Intersection of Art & Activism
This paper explores the power of cultural organizing with examples of groups and individuals placing art and culture at the center of organizing strategies: organizing from a particular cultural identity, community of place, or worldview. It highlights the work of Third World Majority, Raices, M.U.G.A.B.E.E. and Ricardo Levins Morales.
Civil rights , Community / Regional Development , Economic Justice / Labor , Environment , Human Rights / Social Justice , Immigration , Film / Video / Audio / Digital , Traditional Cultural and Spiritual , Visual Art , Multi / Inter-disciplinary , Education / Awareness Raising , Alliance / Movement / Field Building , Political Engagement
Program
An Introduction to the Profiles
When the Arts & Democracy Project began in 2005, we spoke with artists and activists from across the country who are exemplars at connecting arts, culture, media, and civic participation. We wanted to know more about the work they did. What made it succeed? What challenges did they face? What did they need to increase the impact of their work? We commissioned a series of profiles to document these conversations; some were updated in 2011-2012. "Insights from Arts and Civic Engagement: 13 Profiles" an essay by Lena Richardson, identifies key themes and insights.


Something Else is Possible
Some of the most powerful change happens in the intersections of generations, cultures, sectors, and geographies. Collected here are stories about these intersections and the people who make them. They are strategic artists and creative organizers, activist anthropologists, poetic politicians, and loving family members. All are engaged in the deeply creative act of believing that something else is possible.
Activating the Creativity of Community Development

Jeremy Liu and Gayle Isa talk about the spaces ‘in between’.
By Gayle Isa

Occupy Movements: Art, Culture & Creative Action
This conference call focused on how arts, culture and creative actions are being used as part of the 99% movement across the country.
Call organizer/moderator
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Yolanda Hippensteele, Arts & Democracy Project
- See a compilation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

Image from Housing is a Human Right
Artists in a Movement Moment
Aesthetics and Mathematics of Social Change

Dee Davis and Michelle Miller discuss the art of strategic communications.
By Michelle Miller
Anthropology as Social Activism

Alaka Wali and R. Lena Richardson on drumming circles, sustainable conservation, and valuing difference.
By R. Lena Richardson
Breaking Out of a Bifurcated World

A conversation about the powerfully transformative and at times, painfully fragmented practice of philanthropy.
By Caron Atlas
Quilt at Hopscotch House
Kentucky Foundation for Women Workshop

You Can’t Evict an Idea Whose Time Has Come
By Caron Atlas
At the recent Policy Link Conference in Detroit, at a session called “Holding Ground,” presenters spoke about maintaining equity in a time of cutbacks. At the end of the session, one of the younger audience members asked where in all this talk of holding ground were the progressive ideas, the vision for the future. His question significantly shifted the room.
Connecting Action and Academia in California's Central Valley

Isao Fujimoto and Tim Marema on the power of ‘edgewalking’.
By Tim Marema

Back to the Future (Part One)
We stand on the shoulders of those who came before us. We have a responsibility to those who will come after us.
These simple yet powerful concepts have been echoing in my head the past few days in New Mexico where I participated in a roundtable discussion held at the Institute of American Indian Arts sponsored by the Open Society Foundations, First People’s Fund, and Arts & Democracy Project. The people I met and the stories I heard reinforced the power of the arts – and more importantly culture – in transforming our communities.

Highlights from a Gathering on Cultural Organizing and Climate Solutions
Report from a day-long meeting in New York involving musicians, artists, filmmakers, photographers, theater groups, festival producers, chefs and others working to raise public awareness about the threat of climate change and the promise of clean energy. Sponsored by the Chorus Foundation, the gathering was organized and facilitated by Farhad Ebrahimi, Betsy Taylor, Cuong Hoang, and Lauren Nutter. Arts & Democracy presented on arts and social justice organizing.
Creating With a Sense of Strategic Practice

Maribel Alvarez and Jason Bulluck on paying attention to the ‘little stuff', engaging in critical discourse, and understanding how power can be shaken up.
By Jason Bulluck
BCC: Building Collaborative Capacity - NYC
Creating Transformative Spaces

Harriet Barlow and Kathy Engel talk about the Commons and crossing borders.
By Kathy Engel
Don't Hesitate, Communicate: Fusing Arts, Culture and Social Change

Up From the Roots: Economic and Cultural Equity in Naturally Occurring Cultural Districts

NOCD-NY (The Naturally Occurring Cultural District Working Group)
- Play the NOCD audio postcard
- Visit the NOCD-NY website
Walking the Talk and Talking the Walk
Arts & Democracy Project hosted a People's Potluck in Brooklyn. The potluck was part of a series of artist-led conversations and meals focused on interdependence taking place in the summer of 2011 created by MAPP International Productions in collaboration with Samita Sinha and Create Collective.

From the Highway to Nowhere to the Power of Place
In June and July I was fortunate to attend ROOTS Fest National Learning Exchange in West Baltimore, the Rural Cultural Roundtable in St Paul, and the freeDimensional retreat on Wasan Island in Canada. While diverse in focus, the three events were all grounded in the power of place, culture and creative agency. Collectively they made me reflect on how we can take active roles in creating communities that reflect our values.

Creative Responses to the 10th Anniversary of 9/11
This conference call focused on the 10 Year Anniversary of 9/11 and the programs, cultural convenings and artwork that have helped to heal, facilitate dialogue, build community and move us forward.
Call organizer/moderator
Caron Atlas, The Arts & Democracy Project
Javiera Benavente, The Arts & Democracy Project
- See a compilation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic
National , Economic Justice / Labor , Human Rights / Social Justice , Film / Video / Audio / Digital , Theater / Performance / Spoken Word , Traditional Cultural and Spiritual , Visual Art , Multi / Inter-disciplinary , Education / Awareness Raising , Alliance / Movement / Field Building , Direct Action
Program

Radio for Community, Art and Culture
This conference call was focused on the power of radio in fostering art, culture and community. It provided informattion about an exciting upcoming opportunity for community groups to start their own radio stations.
Call organizer/moderator
Yolanda Hippensteele, Arts & Democracy Project
Call Speakers
Jeff Rousett, Prometheus Radio Project (national)
Hugo Morales, Radio Bilingue (national)
John Freeman, KOCZ Radio (Opelousas, Louisiana)
- See the slide presentation associated with the call
- See a compilation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

Cultural Organizing and Collaborating Across Sectors at the National Rural Assembly
Jeremy Frey Porcupine basket c/o Maine Indian Basketmakers Association
Rural Cultural Roundtable

Cultural Organizing Workshop at ROOTS Fest
Artists who are dedicated to social justice often find themselves organizing their communities, their audiences, or even other artists. But what does it mean to be an 'organizer'? This workshop took place during ROOTS Fest's National Learning Exchange and explored the intersection between culture and organizing. (June, 2011)

Arts & Economic Justice
This nation-wide conference call was focused on the role of the arts, culture and media in economic justice organizing and movement building in communities across the U.S.
Call organizers/moderators
Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project
Michelle Miller, SEIU
Call Speakers
Michael John Garces, Cornerstone Theater/Teatro Jornalero Sin Fronteras (Los Angeles)
Christine Lewis, Domestic Workers United (New York City)
Todd Wolfson, Media Mobilizing Project (Philadelphia)
- See a compliation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

Music, Memory and Imagination
Two separate, yet related–events made me think about music and memory, and the healing properties they offer together.

Fabulous February of Freedom
February 2011 was the busiest month of my life. I participated in a revolution that toppled a corrupt regime after 30 years of dictatorship.

Pro-Democracy Organizing in the Middle East & Beyond
Focusing on events in Egypt and the extraordinary pro-democracy movements sweeping across North Africa and the Middle East, this conference call highlights how artists, art spaces and cultural organizers in the region and in the U.S. are participating and responding, and how more cultural workers can engage in positive ways.
Call organizers/moderators
Andrea Assaf, Art2Action
Todd Lester, freeDimensional & the Creative Resistance Fund
Call Speakers
Dr. Dalia Basioun, http://egyptvu.com (Egypt)
Khaled Mattawa (Bengazhi, Libya / University of Michigan)
Ahmed Issawi, Alwan for the Arts (Egypt/New York, NY)
- See a compliation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

Cultural Organizing for Community Recovery, New Orleans

Update on Belarus Free Theater

Little Globe Crosstown #4, Santa Fe Bus Opera - photo Chris Jonas
Inspirations from 2010
Looking back on 2010, I am inspired by the grace and power of the imagination in the midst of challenging times.
Cultural Organizing for Social Justice Idea Forum
How we can further our work by connecting with one another and with sustained strategies for social justice and movement building? This Idea Forum at the 2010 National Performance Network meeting in Dallas, Texas explored this questions with examples of creative activism and cultural organizing. (December, 2010)

Arts & Equitable Development
November 2010
This conference call focuses on the arts and equitable development work that is being conducted in Brooklyn, NY; Harlan County, KY; Skid Row, Los Angeles; and beyond.
Call organizer/moderator
Caron Atlas, Arts & Democracy Project
Anusha Venkataraman, Arts + Community Change
Call Speakers
Robert Gipe, Higher Ground
John Malpede, Los Angeles Poverty Department
Michael Premo, Housing is a Human Right
Rise Wilson Laundromat Project and Leveraging Investments in Creativity
- See a compliation of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

A New Movement for Humanization
When I first met Grace Lee Boggs in 2003 she transformed me, along with everyone else. Boggs embodies the US Social Forum concept of "another world is possible, another U.S. is necessary," and she celebrated her 95 birthday at the Detroit Social Forum in 2010, looking to the future.
Breaking out of a Bifurcated World
Activist Artist and Media Justice Networking Dinner
National , Urban , West , Cultural / Media Policy , Human Rights / Social Justice , Alliance / Movement / Field Building
Program

Chicago Networking the Networks Dinner

Arts & Culture Resources for Election Participation
- See a compliations of resources and highlighted projects on the call topic

Reportback on the Creative Resistance Retreat
By Caron Atlas

A Rural Conversation
- Part 1: http://vimeo.com/15508085
- Part 2: http://vimeo.com/15508267

Ricardo Levins Morales Reportback on the U.S. Social Forum
Cross-posted from his e-newsletter, reflections from artist Ricardo Levins Morales on his time at the U.S. Social Forum.
Javiera Benavente's Reportback on U.S. Social Forum
On June 22-26, 2010 the 2nd US Social Forum took place in Detroit, MI, and brought together thousands of people from around the country (and beyond) to participate in a movement-building process that distinguishes itself by focusing on creating space "to come up with peoples' solutions to the economic and ecological crisis" we face in the world today.

Immigrant Rights Organizing
National , Southwest , Immigration , Theater / Performance / Spoken Word , Visual Art
Program
Detroit U.S. Social Forum Workshops and Creativity Lab
Image from the Art Dept. Chronicles
Open Internet
National , Cultural / Media Policy , Film / Video / Audio / Digital , Policy / Law Change
Program
Creative Recovery: Culture, Planning, and Community Engagement course

Taking Over and Talking Back
Brooklyn Networking the Networks dinner

White House Briefing on Art, Community, Social Justice and Recovery
Cultural Organizing at the Pedagogy and Theater of the Oppressed Conference
This multiracial, intergenerational, and multidisciplinary dialogue between civically engaged artists, cultural organizers, and scholars focused on the intersection between art, culture, and organizing around social change. It addressed both tensions as well as synergies in this work and offered examples of different approaches – some generated by artists and some generated by community organizers. (Minnapolis, May, 2009)
Cross-ÂSector Partnerships and the Role of the Arts in Policy and Systems Change
By Erik Takeshita and Anusha Venkataraman
In April of 2009, 27 participants from the arts, community development, education and other diverse sectors around the country met at California State Monterey Bay as part of the Community Arts Convening and Research Project to discuss “Cross-Sector Partnership and the Role of the Arts in Policy and Systems Change.” This is the report from that session.Arts and Activism Convening in partnership with Nathan Cummings Foundation
Cultural Organizing for Progressive Change session at the National Organizers Alliance Gathering VI
Cultural Organizing for Progressive Change at Michigan Policy Summit
The session explored the power of cultural organizing to expand who is included in organizing and how they are included, creatively frame and communicate visions of change, encourage critical thinking, break down fear, and humanize polarized issues. (Lansing, May 2008)
From Activist Art to Cultural Organizing at Intersection V conference
An interdisciplinary dialogue between artists and organizers, co-organized with New World Theatre, that provided frameworks and went deeper into examples and issues related to cultural organizing. What's the difference between issue-based art and cultural organizing? What are some of the successes and challenges artists and organizers have experienced in working together? Where does your work fit in the spectrum? (Amherst, MA April 2008)
Learning Community Gathering
Hip Hop artist and activist gathering
In this strategic conversation, cosponsored with the League of Young Voters, Hip Hop artists, presenters, and activists shared their plans for 2008 and how they might collaborate in their work.

State of the Nation Gathering
Highlander 75th Anniversary Celebration Gathering
This gathering took place as part of the Highlander Center’s 75th Anniversary and followed a one-day institute on cultural organizing that was also part of the celebration. The goal of Highlander was and is to provide education and support to poor and working people fighting economic injustice, poverty, prejudice, and environmental destruction. Presenters at the gathering included: co-facilitators Anasa Trautman, Highlander Center; Caron Atlas and Javiera Benavente, Arts & Democracy Project; Amelia Kirby, Appalshop; Carlton Turner, Alternate Roots; Michelle Miller, SEIU; Mathew Jones, SNCC Freedom Singers; and Baldemar Velazquez, Farm Labor Organizer Committee.

Atlanta United States Social Forum
The Arts & Democracy Project’s session on cultural organizing at the first-ever USSF in Atlanta had a standing room only crowd of 60 people. (June 2007)

Rural Cultural Organizer Gathering
This was a small 1.5 day-long strategic national gathering of cultural organizers cosponsored by the Main Street Project /Raices, Center for Rural Strategies, and the Humboldt Area Foundation in Klamath, CA, April 2007. Also participating were Alternate Roots, Appalshop, Central Valley Partnership for Citizenship, Llano Grande Center, Feral Arts, United Indian Health Services, and Northland Poster Collective.
Imaging the Frame, Framing the Image
In the first years of the Arts & Democracy Project we co-convened small conversations to learn about the needs and interests of artists and activists across the country. Our first one, cosponsored with the New Progressive Coalition, took place at la Pena in Berkeley, bringing together over twenty Bay Area artists, activists, and cultural organizers for a discussion about the relationship between framing, community cultural development, arts, and organizing. (March 2007)
Cultural Organizing: A Conversation at the Intersection

ACCESS and the Arab American National Museum

All-Ages Movement Project

Appalshop and Robert Salyer

Future of Music Coalition

Hip Hop Congress

Los Angeles Poverty Department

League of Young Voters

Marty Pottenger

Sojourn Theatre
Northwest , Education , Peace , Theater / Performance / Spoken Word , Policy / Law Change
Program

Urban Bush Women

We Got Issues!
Working Films
Crossing the Borders of Culture and Politics

Paul Chin and Vanessa Whang talk about animating a Latin American idea in the U.S..
By Vanessa Whang
Direct and Indirect Approaches to Community Change

Littleglobe and SouthWest Organizing Project talk about finding a relationship between community-engaged arts and organizing.
By Valerie Martinez, Robby Rodriguez, Molly Sturges, and Rosina Roibal
Finding Common Language Between Artists and Community Organizers

The second Bridge Conversation between Littleglobe and SouthWest Organizing Project about their ongoing collaboration.
Incarceration, Fatherhood, and Artmaking

Carol Fennelly and Ayo Ngozi on artmaking with fathers and children in federal and state prisons.
By Ayo Ngozi and Carol Fennelly
National , Northeast , Civil rights , Criminal Justice , Human Rights / Social Justice , Multi / Inter-disciplinary , Direct Action
Program
Innovative Approaches to Linking Nonprofit and For-profit Models

Adam Huttler and Ruby Lerner on entrepreneurial arts service organizations.
By Adam Forest Huttler
Interweave of Culture and Ecology

Ken Wilson and Caron Atlas talk about cultural context and creative philanthropy.
By Caron Atlas
Listening to the Stories Underneath the Work We Do

Paula Allen and R. Lena Richardson talk about traditional arts and culture as resources for Native community health.
By R. Lena Richardson
Multifaceted Art of Community Planning

Ron Shiffman and Anusha Venkataraman consider the intersections of organizing, creative practice, and community-based development.
By Anusha Venkataraman
New Paradigms of Artful Change

A discussion about whether art can be as powerful a vehicle for change as it can be a bastion for maintaining the status quo.
By Dudley Cocke, Peter Pennekamp, and Craig McGarvey
Organic and Traditional Bridging

Francisco Guajardo and Edyael Casaperalta on intentionality, consciousness, and creating new opportunities.
By Edyael Casaperalta
Rural , Southwest , Community / Regional Development , Democracy , Education , Immigration , Film / Video / Audio / Digital , Traditional Cultural and Spiritual , Education / Awareness Raising , Alliance / Movement / Field Building , Community Engagement , Policy / Law Change , Leadership and Skill Development
Program
Planning the Revolution over Collards

Tufara Waller Muhammad and Javiera Benavente talk about arts and culture in Southern organizing and the danger of spotlighting individuals.
By Javiera Benavente
Regional , Southeast , Civil rights , Community / Regional Development , Economic Justice / Labor , Environment , Human Rights / Social Justice , Music , Theater / Performance / Spoken Word , Traditional Cultural and Spiritual , Education / Awareness Raising , Community Engagement , Political Engagement
Program
Politics and Humanity

Mark Ritchie and Caron Atlas talk about balancing work and life.
By Caron Atlas
Power of Art To Move People

Ismael Ahmed and Anan Ameri discuss the extraordinary model of the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services (ACCESS).
By Anan Ameri
Spiritual Core of Indigenous Social Justice

Tia Oros Peters and Vanessa Whang talk about maintaining your vision and integrity in rooms of power.
By Vanessa Whang
Tensions and Synergies of Being Strategic and Creative

Brad Lander and Esther Robinson discuss organizing and art, anthropological listening, and whether being holistic is important.
By Esther Robinson
Theater and Banned Cultural Expression in Belarus

freeDimensional talks with the Belarus Free Theatre.
By Todd Lester and Carolin Wiedemann
Who Will Carry the Work Forward?

An intergenerational conversation at the State of the Nation festival and a tribute to Nayo Watkins.
By Caron Atlas, R. Lena Richardson, and Carlton Turner
Arts of Regional Change
The Art of Regional Change (ARC) brings together scholars, students, artists, and community groups to collaborate on media arts projects that strengthen communities, generate engaged scholarship, and inform regional decision making. Founded by media artist jesikah maria ross, ARC is a joint project of the University of California at Davis Humanities Institute and the UC Davis Center for Regional Change.
A Youth Voices Curriculum Resource and Guidebook developed to help other communities engage in similar projects is planned for spring 2012.

Center for Urban Pedagogy
The Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP) Making Policy Public series of foldout posters uses graphic design to explore and explain public policy. Each poster is the result of collaboration between a designer, an advocate, and CUP. To date, CUP has produced eight posters/instructional pamphlets on issues ranging from affordable housing to the rights of domestic workers.
Operation Paydirt / Fundred Dollar Bill Project
Operation Paydirt/Fundred Dollar Bill Project (Paydirt/Fundred) is a multidisciplinary, artist-driven project addressing the national crisis of lead-contaminated soil. With the self-expression of the young people most affected by lead contamination, these projects propose a solution that incorporates demonstrated scientific procedure. The approach extends across disciplines of art, science, and education and is sensitive to aspects of community development and urban infrastructure.
Not In Our Town (NIOT)
Not in Our Town (NIOT) is a national organization that creates films and video, and facilitates convenings to help communities working together to stop hate through creative anti-bias programs and responses. Anchored by a social networking website, NIOT documents and shares initiatives, helps link individuals and groups, and provides guidance for positive intergroup responses to hateful actions. Aired on PBS stations on September 21, 2011 (http://www.niot.org/lightinthedarkness), and screened at venues around the country, Light in the Darkness is the latest in a series of films produced by the Working Group of NIOT. In addition to their documentary work, NIOT has produced over 45 videos (http://www.niot.org/videos).
Llano Grande
The Llano Grande Center for Research and Development’s vision is to inspire a youth culture that aspires to attend college and engage in community change. Beginning informally in the early 1990s with activities intended to show Edcouch-Elsa High School students in Texas that college was both possible and necessary for them, the Llano Grande Center was formalized in 1997 as a program of the Edcouch-Elsa Independent School District (EEISD). The center has trained students, educators, and community development agents locally, nationally, and internationally on how to distinguish, tell, and use their story to achieve community change.
- Llano Grande : More Videos
Sojourn Theatre
Sojourn Theatre is an ensemble of ten core artists creating new performances in Portland, Oregon, and around the country. Their innovative work shares a goal of bringing together strangers to collectively experience and strategize in arts-based civic dialogue projects. Sojourn’s members are nationally recognized for their innovation as artists and engagement practitioners, and the company’s work is featured regularly at conferences and universities nationwide as a "best practice model" for arts-based civic dialogue projects.
The Strength of Scribe, Where Videos Give Voice to Unheard Stories
Scribe Video Center came into being in December 1982. It was founded by Louis Massiah as a place where individuals and communities could learn media making and explore the use of video as both an artistic medium and a tool for progressive social change. The center has grown in size from a small rented workshop space to an internationally recognized media arts education center in a 4,000-square-foot loft that has helped thousands of people and over 150 community groups document their passions and concerns in some 200 videos produced with the center’s support.

