Hackney, Fiona ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8489-4600, Figueiredo, Deirdre, Onions, Laura, Rogers, Gavin and Milovanovic, Jana (2019) Being Maker-Centric: making as method for self-organising and achieving craft impact in local communities and economies. In: The Organization of Craft Work: identities, meanings, and materiality. Routledge Studies in Management, Organizations and Society . Routledge, London, pp. 235-254. ISBN 9781138636668 (hardback); 9780367355487 (paperback); 9781315205861 (ebook)
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Abstract
This chapter explores making, and its associated values, through the lens of Maker-Centric, an Arts & Humanities Research Council-funded project that works with stakeholders and community groups to explore how arts and crafts, hand-making and digital fabrication methods might build community, social and cultural change, and, longer term, economic assets and agencies. The 'messiness' of the Maker-Centric process seemed to reflect inherent complexities in communities and community working, and became a defining aspect of the project. Craft and the act of making together as a means to produce knowledge and experience – including unique forms of embodied knowledge – also feed into and are of benefit to the wider ecology, a concern that framed the Community Asset-based Research & Enterprise (CARE) project and continues to inform Maker-Centric. A number of seasoned community participants from the CARE and Utopias projects took on the role of creative ambassadors to apply and further realise their skills as community researchers.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
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