The Stamps School Welcomes New NEA Research Lab


The Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design will soon be home to a new National Endow­ment for the Arts Research LabCom­mis­sion­ing Public Art Through Com­mu­nity Engage­ment Arts to Improve Health, and Social/​Emotional Well-Being by Reduc­ing Youth Firearm Injury.

Stew­arded by Jane Prophet, Asso­ciate Dean for Research and Cre­ative Work at Stamps; Stamps Pro­fes­sor Stephanie Tharp; and School of Pub­lic Health Pro­fes­sor Marc Zim­mer­man, the cen­ter will build on a pilot study funded by NIH through the School of Pub­lic Health at U of M. The study led the research team to their hypoth­e­sis that pub­lic art can ben­e­fit com­mu­ni­ties by reduc­ing firearm-related police inci­dents (and other vio­lent crime). 

The research team’s pilot study was guided by Zimmerman’s 2018 Busy Streets The­ory (BST), which focuses on those fea­tures of neigh­bor­hoods that fos­ter pos­i­tive social processes which in turn deter vio­lent crime. BST suggests that when neigh­bor­hood res­i­dents trans­form vacant prop­er­ties into invit­ing, well-main­tained spaces, they send a mes­sage that peo­ple care about this place. The com­mu­nity improve­ments also bring people together to cre­ate healthy social inter­ac­tion, col­lec­tive effi­cacy, social cohe­sion, and a sense of pride and com­mu­nity in the place. These fac­tors, then help deter vio­lent crime and increase safe liv­ing environments. 

“Our pre­lim­i­nary research sup­ports the idea that there is a close rela­tion­ship between pub­lic art and a reduc­tion in firearm-related police inci­dents,” Prophet said. ​“We’re eager to learn more about this rela­tion­ship through our research — and share it in ways that can pro­vide pol­icy mak­ers with the infor­ma­tion they need to cre­ate change in their communities.”

The research team also plans to work closely with com­mu­nity part­ners to find out how dif­fer­ent types of com­mu­nity engage­ment in the design and pro­duc­tion of pub­lic art projects can reduce firearm inci­dents and injuries.

Lec­tur­ers Melanie Manos and Emilia White (Stamps); under­grad­u­ates Lia New (Stamps) and Kilala Ichie-Vin­cent (Taub­man); Grad stu­dent Greg Bush­man (Pub­lic Health), and inde­pen­dent artist and researcher, Amira Hanafi played crit­i­cal roles in the work of the pilot study.

The new cen­tre was awarded $149,297 from the NEA with addi­tional match­ing com­mit­ments, cre­at­ing a total bud­get of $298,618. The funds will sup­port research on how pub­lic art and com­mu­ni­ties who invest in oppor­tu­ni­ties for the pub­lic to engage in cre­ative expres­sion together can reduce the rate of youth firearm injury. The cen­tre will start work in early 2022. 

Learn more about the Stamps School’s cross-dis­ci­pli­nary research efforts in the realm of firearm injury pre­ven­tion in this 2021 Michi­gan Minds pod­cast with Jane Prophet.

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