Get More Zócalo

Eclectic but curated. Smart without snark. Ideas journalism with a head and heart.

You may opt out or contact us anytime.

×

Zócalo Podcasts

Soundcloud Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts
×
Zócalo An ASU Knowledge Enterprise Digital Daily
  • SECTIONS
    • New at Zócalo
    • Ideas
      • Essays
      • Interviews
      • Connecting California
      • Dispatches
    • Chronicles
      • Poetry
      • Prizes
      • Readings
      • Where I Go
      • Letters to Zócalo
    • Viewings
      • Highlight Videos
      • Glimpses
      • Sketchbook
    • Explorations
      • Inquiries
      • What It Means to Be American
      • Hawai’i in the Public Square
      • How Should Societies Remember Their Sins?
    • All Events
      • Upcoming Events
      • Past Events
      • The Takeaway
      • In the Green Room
    • About
      • Mission
      • Masthead
      • Advisory Board
      • Partners
      • Contact Us
×
Zócalo An ASU Knowledge Enterprise Digital Daily Zócalo An ASU Knowledge Enterprise Digital Daily

civic engagement

What Is a Fun Palace?

How a Once-Defunct Idea for Community-Driven Joy Springs to Life Every Year

 

This piece publishes alongside the Zócalo/Los Angeles Times program “Would Parliamentary America Have More Fun?,” tomorrow, Friday, February 23, at 7 PM PST. Register here to attend in person or online.

For one weekend in 2014, my local community and I came together and took over Brockwell Lido, an outdoor swimming pool in South London. We put on an entirely free weekend of arts, culture, and science events for our community. There were kayaks in the swimming pool, shadow puppetry, cheerleading, scientists talking about the effects …

by Amie Taylor | February 22, 2024

Read More


Why Does California Hate Public Participation?

Real Civic Engagement Requires Both Money and Robust Infrastructure

by Joe Mathews | March 11, 2019

Los Angeles is a city of more than four million people. And in its next budget, it might—I repeat, might—launch an Office of Civic Engagement to help all residents better …

The National Partisan Nastiness Is Now Poisoning Local Politics

A Former Ventura Mayor Says Washington’s Ideological Warfare Is Making Municipal Governing Uglier, Harsher, and Harder

by William Fulton | July 24, 2018

Not long ago, a homeless man wandered into a restaurant on the ocean promenade in the city of Ventura, California, and stabbed to death a young man who was eating …

From the Wreckage of the ’92 Riots, a Better Los Angeles Rises

After 25 Years, a More Diverse, Civic-Minded City Is Embracing Its Shared Destiny

By Roberto Suro and Gary Painter | April 27, 2017

Luxury condominiums compete with foreign banks on the new skyline of Koreatown. On a Saturday night, 20-somethings crowd the sidewalks, huddling around food trucks, circling in and out of karaoke bars, …

Grow up, Sacramento!

Why California Needs Its Central Valley Cities to Step up to Civic Adulthood

By Joe Mathews | February 9, 2017

Are you finally growing up, Sacramento?

I pose that question not to our state government but to the real Sacramento, by which I mean the Sacramento Capital Region. It’s a query …

How to Reclaim Broken Public Places

From Dirty Streets in Bangalore to a Ragged River in L.A., Revival Requires Community

By Marianne Krasny | January 6, 2016

How do you revive a broken place?

That’s a question that I have pondered for more than 15 years, visiting and reading about places broken after long slow declines—from vacant lots …

Post navigation

Next

Related
Essay

California Can Reconceive the Arts by Offering More Choices and Ways to Participate

Demographic and Technological Shifts Could Let Arts in the Golden State Better Serve Communities

By Jennifer Novak-Leonard|June 22, 2017

California is undergoing massive changes in technology, demography, the nature of work and, thus, in leisure activity. So is its cultural sector, with consequences for how Californians experience art and …

The Takeaway

Can Engaging with Art Turn a Bunch of Selfie-Takers into Citizens?

Changing Audiences Are Making Creators and Institutions Rethink Art Itself

By Joe Mathews and Reed Johnson|June 26, 2017

If the essence of art is necessarily elusive and hard to define, so too is the essence of arts engagement. As audiences grow more diverse and demanding, and new digital …

Essay

Don’t Be So Snooty, Small Towns Have Museums and Performing Arts, Too

The Problem Is That Too Many People Feel Unwelcome in Galleries and Theaters

By Lisa McDermott|November 3, 2015

Growing up, my siblings and I were surrounded by art. In our house, jazz and opera were always playing, literature lined the shelves, and the work of local artists hung …

Essay

Audience Engagement Is Not Community Engagement. We Need More of the Latter.

Arts Organizations Should Build Relationships That Aim for Mutual Benefit

By Doug Borwick|June 22, 2017

Engagement is an important word in the nonprofit arts industry, often paired (at a minimum) with arts, audience, and community. Over the last decade, “engagement” has very nearly become worn …


By continuing to use our website, you agree to our privacy and cookie policy.

✕

Get More Zócalo

No paywall. No ads. No partisan hacks. Ideas journalism with a head and a heart.

You may opt out or contact us anytime.

×
  • Ideas
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Connecting California
    • Dispatches
  • Chronicles
    • Poetry
    • Prizes
    • Readings
    • Where I Go
    • Letters to Zócalo
  • Viewings
    • Highlight Videos
    • Glimpses
    • Sketchbook
  • Explorations
    • Inquiries
    • What It Means to Be American
    • Hawai’i in the Public Square
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
    • The Takeaway
    • In the Green Room
  • About
    • Mission
    • Masthead
    • Advisory Board
    • Partners
    • Contact Us
COPYRIGHT 2025 ARIZONA BOARD OF REGENTS.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
PRIVACY POLICY.