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Journal ArticleDOI

The Community Mural and Democratic Art Processes

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TLDR
The 2002 Saginaw Community Mural Project as discussed by the authors highlights the adaptable, site-specific, educational, and inclusive process of community mural development, and the nine-step "tennis game" process maximizes both professionalism and community participation and decisions.
About
This article is published in Review of Radical Political Economics.The article was published on 2004-12-01. It has received 2 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Mural & Comprehensive Employment and Training Act.

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Citations
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Expressing community through freedom market and visual connections

TL;DR: The authors examined how different ways of conceptualizing, interpreting, and producing murals impacted how an urban community saw itself and found that the mural project constructed pathways for building relationships and community in ways that made neighborhood transformation possible.

Contemporary Art as a Catalyst for Social Change : Public Art and Art Production in a Community of Practice

TL;DR: This paper contextualised and discussed contemporary art as a catalyst for change, and raised social issues through art production in the urban district Nima, and discussed the perspectives of "community", "diversity", and "inclusion" in contemporary art.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Thirty Years of Changing Federal, State, and Local Relationships in Employment and Training Programs

TL;DR: There have been three major training programs in the United States in the past thirty years: the Manpower Development and Training Act (MDTA) from 1962 to 1973, the Comprehensive employment and training Act (CETA)from 1973 to 1982, and the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA)from 1982 to the present as mentioned in this paper.
Book

Bureaucratizing the Muse: Public Funds and the Cultural Worker

TL;DR: In this paper, Dubin's account is a fascinating story of the tensions between struggling artists who need a paycheck but fear the compromise of their art and bureaucrats who need to produce measurable results.