Author(s): Steinbach, Carol
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1997

Over the past ten years, the National Congress for Community Economic Development (NCCED) has conducted a series of four national census surveys to record the trends and achievements of community-based development organizations. This report contains NCCEDs data findings from 1994 to the end of 1997.

Author(s): Weiss, Marcus and Kelley, Kevin
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1999

Collaborations between community development corporations (CDCs) and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) initiatives which provide funds for job creation programs, have become more commonplace in recent years. Programs operated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) have been a key catalyst, nurturing productive partnerships between traditional TANF-funded agencies and CDCs.

Author(s): Mather, Tom
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1995

Art groups are using a new sales pitch these days with potential contributors. Forget art for art's sake. A healthy dose of arts and culture also can help stimulate economic growth in a community, arts proponents say. In Charlotte alone, the nonprofit arts industry pumped $31.2 million into the local economy in 1994, according to a study for the Arts and Science Council of Charlotte/Mecklenburg. A similar study by The Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County found that the council and its 13 member groups create 236 full-time jobs that annually generate $5.2 million in wages and

Author(s): Mark, Charles Christopher
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1966

Over the past 20 years, this country has witnessed a steadily increasing desire among our citizens to share in the accomplishments of the mind and spirit.

Author(s): Deane, Robert T. and Ibrahim, A. S. Ibrahim
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1976

Applied Management Sciences was awarded a contract in September of 1976 from the National Endowment for the Arts with a very broad mandate. Not only were we, within a period of six months, to model a variety of institutional types, but we were also to acquire all of the available data pertaining to these institutional types (and identify and document data gaps in the process), edit the data so as to be suitable for use in model parameter estimation (i.e., regression analysis), use these data to empirically test the models, and offer recommendations regarding what we felt to be the most

Author(s): National Research Center of the Arts
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1975

CONTENTS
Introduction.
Methodology:
     Constructing the survey universe.
     Sampling procedures and weighting.
     Field procedures.
     Data editing and validation.
The two distinct worlds of the arts.
The operations of cultural institutions:
     Length of time operational during the year.
     Increases in programs and activities between 1973 and 1976.
     Attendance patterns.
    

Author(s): Bartholemy, Mary
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1979

Author(s): Ford, Neil M. and Queram, Bonnie J.
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1978

Today, arts administrators are faced with a growing number of variables of increasing complexity in the marketing of their products and services. One of the most important variables, and yet least studied and understood, is that of pricing. In the current market environment, the arts organization/institution has to contend with limited financial resources and diminishing subsidies. Therefore, earned income must cover more of the costs.

Author(s): Quint, Barbara and Newman, Lois
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1968

A listing of about 215 books and magazine articles on the "live" performing arts, excluding cinema and music halls, but including theater, opera, ballet, and concerts. Community and campus theater is included. The arrangement is by author, or title for anonymous items, under these headings: performing arts centers; the economics of the performing arts; general references on the state of the performing arts. The references date roughly from 1965 to November 1969.

Author(s): Owen, Virginia Lee and Hendon, William S.
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1984

This is Volume III of three of the Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Cultural Economics and Planning held April 25-28, 1984, in Akron, Ohio.

Author(s): Grant, Nancy K.; Hendon, William S.; and Owen, Virginia Lee
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1986

This is Volume I of three of the Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Cultural Economics held May 12-14, 1986, at the Palace of the Popes in Avignon, France.

Author(s): Dupuis, Xavier
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1984

Special supplement to the Journal of Cultural Economics. Selected papers presented at the conference L'economie du Spectacle Vivant et L'audiovisual, Paris, France, October 15-16, 1985.

Author(s): Anderson, Robert J. Jr.; Baumol, Hilda; Maltezou, Sonia P.; and Wuthnow, Robert
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1977

CONTENTS
A. Summary of Statements.

Author(s): Anderson, Robert J. Jr.; Baumol, Hilda; Maltezou, Sonia P.; and Wuthnow, Robert
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1977

CONTENTS
1. Introduction and summary. 

Author(s): National Endowment for the Arts, Research Division
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1993

Based on data from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis, consumer expenditures for admissions to performing arts events in 1992 amounted to $5.1 billion, or 8% more than in 1991. For the third consecutive year, expenditures on motion pictures have exceeded expenditure levels for the performing arts. In addition, 1992 expenditures for performing arts events have been lower than expenditures on spectator sports. This is consistent with the five year trend starting in 1988. As stated above, performing arts admission receipts totaled $5.1 billion in 1992, while

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