Arts Management Professor Carole Rosenstein joins colleagues from Indiana University as Workshop in Cultural Affairs featured presenter!

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Arts Management Professor Carole Rosenstein will be a featured presenter in a Workshop for Cultural Affairs series with colleagues at Indiana University's Center for Cultural Affairs and O'Neil School. The workshops highlight researchers at the O'Neill School, the greater Indiana University community, and beyond. The workshop connects cultural affairs experts together in a forum for scholarly discussion, debate, and exploration of the important issues being faced in the field of cultural affairs.

Image of Carole Rosenstein, Joanna Woronkowicz, and Doug Noonan for "Innovating Institutions and Inequities in the Arts"
From left to right, Carole Rosenstein, Joanna Woronkowicz, and Doug Noonan for Innovating Institutions and Inequities in the Arts.

The topic of the workshop is "Innovating Institutions and Inequities in the Arts" from the book with the same name edited by Joanna Woronkowicz and Doug Noonan, professors in the O"Neil School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Carole co-published a chapter of the book Inequities in the Cultural Data Infrastructure: Insights from Two Recent Studies with colleagues Mirae Kim and Neville Vakharia.

For this workshop, Carole will be joined by the editors Joanna Woronkowicz and Doug Noonan.

Wednesday, September 18th, 2024 at 12pm - 1pm EDT via Zoom.

Participation is free, but registration is required! 

About the Book: Published by Palgrave Macmillan Cham, this book includes evidence-based accounts of inequities in the arts as well as a focus on systems that perpetuate and resolve inequities in this context – a topic of wide interest to researchers and practitioners in arts and culture. The chapters in this volume include both the empirical rigor and a diversity of disciplinary perspectives that makes it an essential piece of scholarship in the arts and culture. The volume is ideal for students and scholars studying areas such as sociology of the arts, cultural economics, and arts management. This collection is the result of a series the Arts, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation Lab at the Center for Cultural Affairs at Indiana University hosted in summer 2022 on the topic of “Innovating Institutions and Inequities in the Arts” co-sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Doris Duke Foundation. Learn more about this book!

About Carole Rosenstein: A Professor of Arts Management and affiliated Professor of Folklore at George Mason University, where she directs the MFA Arts Management Concentration. Carole studies cultural policy and the social life of the arts and culture, focusing on cultural democracy and cultural equity. Her research portfolio includes commissions from the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is the author of Understanding Cultural Policy (2e, 2024). Learn more about Carole!

About Joanna Woronkowicz: A cultural economist who conducts research on labor, capital, and technological investments in arts and culture. She joined O’Neill in 2013 and prior to that was the senior research officer for the National Endowment for the Arts. Woronkowicz is co-founder and faculty director of the Center for Cultural Affairs and co-director of the Arts, Entrepreneurship and Innovation Lab. Her first book, Building Better Arts Facilities: Lessons from a U.S. National Study, was published by Routledge in 2015. Her forthcoming book, Being an Artist in America: How Artists Build Careers and What Society Can Do to Support Them will be published with Stanford University Press.

About Doug Noonan: A professor at the O’Neill School at IU Indianapolis. His research focuses on a variety of policy and economics issues related to the cultural affairs, urban environments, neighborhood dynamics, and quality-of-life. His research has been sponsored by a variety of organizations (e.g., National Science Foundation, Environmental Protection Agency, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, National Endowment for the Arts) on topics like policy adoption, environmental risks, energy, air quality, spatial modeling, green urban revitalizations, and cultural economics. He joined the O’Neill School in 2013 after spending more than a decade on the faculty at the School of Public Policy at Georgia Tech. He is currently the co-editor-in-chief of the Journal of Cultural Economics, co-founder and Faculty Director IU Center for Cultural Affairs, and co-director of the Arts, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation Lab.

Register now!

Learn more about Workshop in Cultural Affairs series!


Event details originally appeared on Indiana University's Center for Cultural Affairs events website and book details are available at Spinger Link.