The literature in the field suggests that a community without arts-practice risks its future. Contemporaneously, evidence suggests that the future of some communities, specifically regional or rural communities, are at risk because of the withdrawal of essential services, which leads to economic and social decline. There is also evidence that arts practice has revived economic and social activity (and performance measures) in regional cities and towns. In this article, I argue that the arts foster regional sustainability, and I propose that an arts leadership that is collective in nature and associated with vision and creativity is needed if the arts are to achieve regional sustainability.
History
Journal
Journal of arts management, law, and society
Volume
33
Issue
3
Season
Fall
Pagination
211 - 227
Publisher
Heldref Publications
Location
Washington, D.C.
ISSN
1063-2921
eISSN
1930-7799
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article