cover image: The social impact of NSW arts, screen and culture programs

20.500.12592/c63f5r

The social impact of NSW arts, screen and culture programs

7 Apr 2019

A summary and high-level and develop careers and into the social impacts of arts, overview of the social impact of businesses in the arts and cultural sector” (Lois Randall screen and culture programs and selected programs delivered through the role that arts and cultural Create NSW and the NSW cultural Creative Consulting 2016: 10). [...] It is in this The report reinforces the need understood both in Australia context that the arts, as for policy to be underpinned by a and internationally, and an empowering tools through comprehensive understanding of examination of the strengths which to express and explore cultural value and the complexity and weaknesses of different identity, have proved valuable of the role the arts and cultur. [...] The support provided possible to make the following impact must be tempered through the programs and observations regarding key issues by an understanding of funding of Create NSW generates and best practice: the limitations of restricted a considerable amount of activity • Any consideration of the measurement tools and an in the four social impact domains value of the arts and culture acceptance. [...] However, first-hand, individual complex community settings, experiences of arts and Understanding and assessing including in health and culture must be at the heart the social impacts of the arts is criminal justice.of any examination of cultural a complex endeavour, and no value and the social impact of • New models of evaluation one methodology is sufficient. [...] Participants with high the number of Aboriginal people However, the partial nature of the engagement received more involved in the arts; 2) recognition evaluation limits understanding than half of the total value of NSW Aboriginal arts and of the flow of value to families, for the group, even though culture; and 3) Aboriginal cultural community, and community they comprised only 5% of the engageme.
Pages
88
Published in
Australia

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