Mike White
The Empirical Highway or the Lantern Road?
Arts in health is at a fork in the road. The hard-paved route, The Empirical Highway, leads to probable damnation by way of austerity culture, a narrowing definition of accredited practice, and evidence calls that are signalled through a medical model of health. Those who venture on this path will find their creativity randomised, controlled and trialled. The other route, which I term The Lantern Road, tracks its progress through reflective practice, has lit beacons of new traditions in participatory health promotion, and affirms relationship-based working as the way to a sustainable vision of community-based arts in health supported by inter-disciplinary research.
As the World Health Organisation declared in 2008 “Evidence is only one part of what swings policy decisions – political will and institutional capacity are important too. But more than simply academic exercises, research is needed to generate new understanding in practical, accessible ways, recognising the added value of globally expanded knowledge networks and communities” . In this presentation, I want to reflect on some recent experiences and observations in my work portfolio that suggest where that ‘new understanding’ might be found.
Mike White
Mike White is Senior Research Fellow at St. Chad's College, University of Durham, UK and Adviser on Strategic Development for the Australian Centre for Arts and Health with regard to establishing an international network for both practitioners and researchers in arts and health.
He studied English at Exeter College, Oxford, but ran away from an early career in academia to explore pioneering arts initiatives in social justice. He has been involved in arts in health work since 1988 when he set up the first arts in primary care project in the UK at Brierley Hill.
Since 2000, Mike has been Research Fellow in Arts and Health at the Centre for Medical Humanities (www.dur.ac.uk/cmh
Mike was previously at Gateshead Council where he developed many arts in health and arts for older people projects, as well as public art commsissions such as the landmark Angel of the North by Antony Gormley. Mike runs an independent consultancy, Common Knowledge, with long-time artist colleague Mary Robson. Common Knowledge is a project management, learning development and programme advisory service for effective workforce training in arts in health, social pedagogy in schools, and international collaborations in practice and research.
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