Grandmothers, coaches, school nurses, barbers — what are the roles of non-traditional community leaders like these and what critical roles can they play in engaging historically divested communities and isolated individuals? How can art, imagination, and collective action model best practices for more equitable structures? We are joined by Marisa Morán Jahn, an artist whose work with low-wage workers, new immigrant families, and public housing residents has been described by the Chicago Tribune as exploring “civic spaces and the radical art of play.” She is Director of Integrated Design at Parsons/The New School and a Senior Researcher at MIT. We are also joined by Micah Campbell-Smith, a community developer who launched Black Pittsburgh Matters and has designed policies and trainings with New York’s Community Preservation Corporation and Pittsburgh’s Urban Redevelopment Authority.
Art, Mutualism, and Structural Resilience
Stay up to date
Get updates on the latest stories, from hot topics, to faculty research, alumni profiles, and more—right in your inbox.
To receive issues of the Johns Hopkins Nursing semi-annual printed magazine, sign up here.
The Latest
- Birth Companions Talk Doulas and Maternal Health with Mayor Brandon Scott
- Episode 36: Improving Black Maternal Health Outcomes
- Earth Day: An Opportunity to Address the Environmental Injustice of Plastic Pollution
- BMORE Prepared to Move to Baltimore
- Forging Policy: How Can Doulas Improve Black Maternal Health?
- No. 1 Rankings for the School of Nursing and a Pipeline to the “Best Jobs”