NEA Funds Dr. Ryberg-Webster, team of researchers for PACS Research Lab

will collaborate with a research team studying the intersection of the arts and diversity, equity and inclusion across the US. The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has to a team of researchers, including Dr. Ryberg-Webster, Associate Professor of Urban Studies in the at 51ĀŅĀ×.
The grant will support Place, Arts, & Cultural Systems Lab (PACS): To Study Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) in US Arts and Cultural Districts, or ACDs as theyāre known in research circles.
The NEA is supporting four new Research Labs to fund transdisciplinary research teams grounded in the social and behavioral sciences. Their investment explores the value and impact of the countryās arts ecosystem and the ways the arts can impact other areas of American life.
āOur team is excited and honored to earn this highly competitive award, which will advance collaborative research around arts, culture, and DEI efforts,ā said Dr. Ryberg-Webster. āThe project brings together a group of research and community partners at the local, regional, and national levels. I am thrilled to be a part of this team, along with my colleagues .ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
The first action item that the grant (renewable every two years as research continues) supports is a national survey of arts districts to glean insight on how they view their own DEI activitiesābut also to deep-dive into the challenges that they see in this regard.

āWe expect this to provide a wide variety of information that spans a wide range of places and communities,ā said Dr. Ryberg-Webster. āArts and cultural districts are a big deal for cities and neighborhood revitalization, but at the same time, thereās a lot to untangle. With PACS, weāre looking at everything from art museums and performance venues, down to smaller, more community-focused districts.ā
While the project includes a national survey, the long-term focus of the PACS Lab is the Intermountain West and Industrial Midwest regions, which tend to be ignored in other studies of this kind. With local projects partners, including Clevelandās Playhouse Square (left) and Northwest Neighborhoodsāformerly Detroit-Shoreway, which oversees Gordon Squareāthe collective has a wide swath of data and knowledge to tap into.
āThe dominant lines of inquiry usually focus on the coasts,ā agreed Dr. Ryberg-Webster. āWe have a downtown regional anchor and a neighborhood arts district in our technical working group for the project. Both are representative of robust, energetic arts and culture we have here in the Midwest.ā

The PACS Lab āwill both learn from and serve ACD organizations and neighbors by creating a typology and national public database of ACD characteristics,ā using the resulting database to analyze patterns of DEI practice by district types, geographies, and capacities, and then developing and sharing a flexible toolkit for communities with a range of resources and needs.
āArts and cultural districts are widespread and the barriers toāand best practices forāmaking those districts inclusive, equitable and drivers of economic and social innovation is incredibly important,ā Dr. Ryberg-Webster said. āThis is not just a purely academic exercise. The national survey is phase one; phase two will delve into qualitative case studies to develop deep insights for arts and cultural districts.ā
Dr. Ryberg-Webster serves as an investigator on the PACS Lab project. The principal Investigators are Dr. Amanda Ashley and Dr. Leslie Durham from Boise State University.