The Arts and Social Inclusion

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Communities, Culture, and Capabilities
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Arts and Humanities
Civic and Community Engagement
Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Social Policy
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The relationship of civic participation to cultural engagement pulls us into an old controversy regarding intrinsic vs. instrumental values of the arts.In this presentation, Stern cites international scholarship—at the cross-section of welfare economics, philosophy, and social welfare—as a way out of this impasse. The Europeans have explored a multi-dimensional approach to social inclusion vs. social exclusion. He points out that viewing the arts and culture as a dimension of social inclusion changes the kinds of policy questions we ask about the sector. First, we'd focus on access and opportunity to participate in the arts and how these are distributed across the geographic and social landscape. Second, we could ask how cultural inclusion may provide a means of reducing other forms of social exclusion.

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2011-06-07
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Communities, Culture, and Capabilities
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2023-05-17T20:02:15.000
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These remarks were prepared for “Future of the City: The Arts Symposium,” organized by the University of Chicago and the National Endowment for the Arts, held in Chicago on Tuesday, June 7, 2011. A YouTube of the full panel discussion—“Cities and Their Citizens: Fostering Civic Engagement through the Arts”—was published on June 17, 2011 by the University of Chicago. Here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=2612&v=qjxPcC7YI3o
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