Herberger Institute Dean Steven J. Tepper has called creative placemaking “the most important innovation in arts and cultural policy over the past decade.” The practice holds that designers and artists are critical assets for working with cities and communities to ensure that they are sustainable, prosperous, equitable and inclusive places.
Maria Rosario Jackson is one of the nation’s leading authorities on creative placemaking/creative placekeeping. As an Institute Professor with appointments in Herberger Institute’s The Design School and in ASU’s Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions, Jackson has been building the foundations of the new Studio for Creativity, Place and Equitable Communities at ASU, including the studio’s Faculty Academy program and its online Principles of Creative Placemaking course. The work has been supported in part by a grant from the Kresge Foundation.
The Faculty Academy program builds the bench of faculty at ASU focused on creative placemaking/placekeeping and is a joint effort of the Herberger Institute and Watts College. It comprises faculty members from the visual and performing arts, design and architecture, criminal justice, social work, and community resources and development. This year-long program includes an immersive seminar on creative placemaking principles and practice, workshops on creative placemaking teaching and research and the creation of curricular and knowledge building assets created by cross-disciplinary teams from the Herberger Institute and Watts College. In August 2019, participating faculty traveled to Tucson for a two-day intensive convening hosted by 2017-18 ASU creative placemaking policy fellow Maribel Alvarez, who serves as the associate dean for community engagement at the University of Arizona.