Eventbrite registration open for 21 June event

Registration for the TAI webinar on June the 21st is now open. To book free tickets please visit https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/music-social-inclusion-int-research-and-practice-in-complex-settings-tickets-154383628589  

On June 21st, 3-5pm UK time, practice and research specialists will discuss social music projects from five countries and a study of Indigenous music at the?2nd?workshop of The Arts of Inclusion network. The event will be chaired by Oscar Odena and Andrew Green, University of Glasgow. Confirmed titles and summaries: 

I.?‘Music education in a Brazilian social project: artistic, social and academic outcomes’, by Sergio Figueiredo, retired Associate Professor at State University of Santa Catarina, Brazil. 

The social project entitled Bairro da Juventude, developed in the city of Criciúma, in the south of Santa Catarina state - Brazil, offers musical activities for children and young people in situation of social vulnerability. Musical activities were established in the early 2000s, with a choral project, which expanded over the years, incorporating teaching of orchestral and band instruments. Currently the project serves about 500 children, who benefit artistically, socially and academically from the musical experiences developed. 

 

II.?‘Music Saved Them, They Say, ?by Lukas Pairon, Director of the international research platform on the Social Impact of Making Music (SIMM), Belgium. 

Lukas Pairon was for 20 years the founding director of the Ictus ensemble and founded the humanitarian organization Music Fund. His presentation will focus on the role music can possibly play in social and community work. From 2012 to 2016 Lukas studied social music projects in Kinshasa, DR Congo, with so-called ‘witch’-children living in the streets and with former members of violent gangs. Lukas founded together with practitioners and researchers the international research platform SIMM, which since 2017 supports the development of research in this field. Following his research in Kinshasa he published the monograph ‘Music Saved Them, They Say’ (Routledge, 2020). 

 

III.?“There is no global justice without global cognitive justice”: envisioning music making through the ecologies of knowledges in the context of Mexico, by Hector Vázquez, doctoral researcher at the University of Victoria, Canada. 

In this contribution, Hector uses ecologies of knowledge, a concept developed by Boaventura de Sousa Santos (2014), as a framework to discuss the need to understand, respect, and value diverse manifestations of music making and their transmission. He will present narratives of Huasteco music culture bearers regarding the importance that music making has in their culture as a crucial component to preserve and transmit Huasteco worldview. The relevance of embracing music with Indigenous roots will be discussed in the context of Mexico’s educational system as a tool to foster pride and appreciation for local cultures. 

 

IV.?‘Arts for Peace Education in Chihuahua, Mexico: efforts, challenges and outcomes of two community music programs’, by Patricia A. González-Moreno and Rubén Carrillo, Autonomous University of Chihuahua, Mexico. 

In the last decades, Mexico has been profoundly affected by the drug war and the resulting violence. In order to diminish its negative sociocultural impact, several initiatives have aimed to use the arts for building peace and reconstruct societal bonds. In this presentation, we describe the current state of arts-based peacebuilding programs in Mexico and discuss an ethnographic study of two community music programs in Chihuahua, Umbral Music Program and NUCAM Quinta Carolina, their pedagogical approaches for social inclusion and cohesion, the socio-cultural and musical outcomes and also the hindrances and constraints to fulfil their social purpose. 

 

V.?‘Kithara project: teaching guitar for improving lives’, by Daniel Mateos-Moreno, University of Malaga, Spain. 

“Kithara” is the name of a non-profit project that brings instruments and delivers music education based on playing the guitar to underserved communities in Mexico, Boston and New Mexico. This project enriches the lives of dozens of youths who, otherwise, could not simply buy decent instruments or pay for lessons. Moreover, as a unique feature, the project is carried out by a collective of internationally acclaimed classical guitarists. This paper draws on a discussion of an original case-study focussed on this project, which will be published as chapter in the forthcoming book for Routledge. 

 

VI.?‘I Just Feel I Belong Here: Homeless Choirs and Singing Groups in the UK and Brazil’,?by Shelly Coyne, Policy and Participation Manager at Cyrenians, with Raymond MacDonald, University of Edinburgh. 

Homelessness is an international emergency which has a devastating impact on wellbeing, self-worth, and the potential for individuals to thrive. However, when singers with experience of homelessness participate in choirs, it can enable inclusion, group cohesion and cross-community integration through removal into a sanctuary-type music space. Here singers experience a sense of belonging and feeling part of a family. Within this safe space they can engage in critical identity work, challenge the stigmatising homeless persona and reinforce their musical self. This new able identity is further strengthened through performances, being validated by an audience, which in turn challenges societies perception of this social condition. 

 

VII.?‘Afterword’, by Geoff Baker, Royal Holloway University of London 

Geoff Baker is preparing the Afterword of the forthcoming book and will close the online event with his input.