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Youth Work, Galleries and the Politics of Partnership: New Directions in Cultural Policy Research

Autor Nicola Sim
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 noi 2019
This book sheds critical light on the routinely debated issue of how to create sustainable, equitable and meaningful partnerships between visual art organisations and youth organisations. Using a Bourdieusian framework, this book analyses the different social and professional worlds of youth work and gallery education and explores why tensions often arise between partners in these fields. Written at a time of significant crisis for the UK youth sector and in the context of an entrenched neoliberal policy climate, this publication seeks to highlight hopeful, experimental practice and possibilities for creative resistance. With public organisations and services under ever-greater governmental pressure to pursue collaborations within and across sectors, this is a timely moment to examine the challenges, ethics and advantages of working together, and to bring theoretical discussion to dominant yet vague understandings of partnership.  


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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030251963
ISBN-10: 3030251969
Pagini: 203
Ilustrații: XV, 211 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2019
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria New Directions in Cultural Policy Research

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1: Introduction: The Problem of Partnerships Between Galleries and Youth Organisations.- Chapter 2: Fields of Practice: Theorising Partnership.- Chapter 3: (Un)common Ground: Parallel Histories and Policy Contexts.- Chapter 4: Field Conditions, Attitudes and Relations in Practice.- Chapter 5: Changing the Rules of the Game.- Chapter 6: Partnership Typologies and Practice.- Chapter 7: Recognising and Countering Symbolic Violence.- Chapter 8: The Future of Gallery/Youth Organisation Partnerships.

Notă biografică

Dr Nicola Sim is a freelance researcher and evaluator who works in arts, youth and play settings across the UK. Nicola previously worked as Curator of Public Programmes at Whitechapel Gallery and in 2017 she completed an AHRC-supported Collaborative Doctoral Partnership with Tate and The University of Nottingham, UK.  


Textul de pe ultima copertă

This book sheds critical light on the routinely debated issue of how to create sustainable, equitable and meaningful partnerships between visual art organisations and youth organisations. Using a Bourdieusian framework, this book analyses the different social and professional worlds of youth work and gallery education and explores why tensions often arise between partners and young people in these fields. Written at a time of significant crisis for the UK youth sector and in the context of an entrenched neoliberal policy climate, this publication seeks to highlight hopeful, experimental practice and possibilities for creative resistance. With public organisations and services under ever-greater governmental pressure to pursue collaborations within and across sectors, this is a timely moment to examine the challenges, ethics and advantages of working together, and to bring theoretical discussion to dominant yet vague understandings of partnership.

Caracteristici

Draws on Pierre Bourdieu’s connected concepts of ‘habitus’, ‘capitals’ and ‘fields’ to form a framework that seeks to understand collaborative practices Provides an up to date contextualisation of the UK political landscape in 2019 in order to inform the relationship between the youth and art sectors Supports practitioners in youth work and the arts sector by creating opportunities for acknowledging difference and building respect