Design for Accessibility: An Arts Administrator's Guide

 
GENERAL

Research Abstract
Design for Accessibility: An Arts Administrator's Guide
Every person in America, including the 54 million citizens with disabilities and more than 35 million Americans who are age 65 and older, should be able to participate in the arts and the humanities. Cultural communities across the country are focusing on inclusion: integrating older adults and people with disabilities into all aspects of the organization—from planning and design to marketing and technical assistance. The National Assembly of State Arts Agencies (NASAA), the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts are committed to fully accessible programming. Accessibility, however, must ultimately become everyone’s responsibility to make a lasting difference, and it is organizations and individuals in the field who are making it happen. “Design for Accessibility: A Cultural Administrator's Handbook” represents an update of the Arts Endowment’s “The Arts and 504” (1992) with additional information from the 700-page “Design for Accessibility: An Arts Administrator’s Guide” produced by the Arts Endowment and NASAA in 1994. This resource is designed to help you not only comply with Section 504 and the Americans with Disabilities Act, but to assist you in making access an integral part of your organization’s planning, mission, programs, outreach, meetings, budget and staffing. In the new millennium, inclusion must be ever present in our vision. As new technologies and methods are developed, the possibilities of access will change. Since the disability rights movement rose to prominence in the 1970s, federal legislation has been passed, and disabled individuals are finally becoming part of the cultural mainstream. Great strides have been made, particularly in architectural and program access. Many Americans with disabilities now have the opportunity to create and participate fully in the arts and humanities. Much work, however, remains to be done. We hope this handbook will assist you with that important work. [Forward]
Prepared and published by the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies and the National Endowment for the Arts. A binder with various design suggestion to make art's facilities accessible for persons with disabilities.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Book
National Assembly of State Arts Agencies and National Endowment for the Arts
171
December, 1993
PUBLISHER DETAILS

National Assembly of State Arts Agencies
1029 Vermont Avenue, NW, 2nd Floor
Washington
DC, 20005
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