Research and Advocacy Coordinator

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Title: Research and Advocacy Coordinator
Location: New York City
Reports to: Executive Director & Manager of Justice, Equity, and Inclusion Initiatives
Supervises: Interns, Volunteers
Coordinates with: Development and Communications Manager & Programs Assistant
Status: Part-time, effective immediately, with room for growth, May 2019 – June 2020, 25 hours per week

Dance/NYC’s mission is to promote the knowledge, appreciation, practice, and performance of dance in the metropolitan New York City area. It embeds values of justice, equity, and inclusion into all aspects of the organization. It works in alliance with Dance/USA, the national service organization for professional dance. Dance/NYC seeks a coordinator who will be responsible for, and exercise discretion and independent judgment regarding, all aspects of implementing and growing Dance/NYC’s research and advocacy efforts. The immediate job priorities are to achieve planned program deliverables funded through June 30, 2020, which are focused on immigrant and small-budget dance makers, and to identify and manage additional actionable opportunities for future years.

Essential Functions, Duties, and Responsibilities

1) Research
Reporting to the Executive Director and Manager of Justice, Equity, and Inclusion Initiatives, provide coordinating support for Dance/NYC’s research priorities. Primary activities involve liaising with independent contractors to:

  • Refine the research methodology and manage project timeline;
  • Prepare data and interpret findings;
  • Secure content contributions and compile research components;
  • Identify top trends and recommendations;
  • Gather stakeholder feedback;
  • Provide administrative support in all aspects of report production (e.g. design, editing, printing) and promotion;
  • Create strategies for the dissemination and implementation of research.

2) During 2019-2020, the Research and Advocacy Coordinator will prioritize:

  • Publishing and promoting a third report part of Dance/NYC’s Immigrants. Dance. Arts. Initiative by June 30, 2019
  • Coordinating with independent contractors to execute on a study focused on small-budget dance makers for publication by June 30, 2020. The report will consider as its primary sources:
    • First, in-person dialogue through a convening of Dance Advancement Fund grantees and the wider segment of small-budget dance makers organized to foster peer-learning and drive public attention to the issues impacting small dance makers and ALAANA and disabled artists;
    • Second, grantee applications and mandatory narrative and financial reports; and third, additional quantitative performance activity, financial, audience, and workforce data on small dance makers as may be available through private sources, for example, SMU DataArts, which has been a foundation for ongoing Dance/NYC research.
    • The report will include up to 12 commissioned essays addressing capacity solutions by small-budget dance makers that will have value on their own and as a source for broader project research.

3) Advocacy and Community Organizing

  • Liaise with the Disability. Dance. Artistry. Task Force and Immigrants. Dance. Arts. Task Force that advise and assist Dance/NYC’s initiatives on disability and immigration matters;
  • Liaise with Dance/NYC’s organizational Justice, Equity, and Inclusion Partners to build programmatic synergies, meet Symposium attendance goals, and pursue other potential collaborative opportunities;
  • Coordinate with national and local advocacy partners, such as New Yorkers for Culture & Arts, Stonewall 50 Consortium, among others, on advocacy efforts for the dance and cultural sector; and
  • Draft and present testimony for relevant City Council hearings.

4) Internal

  • Produce relevant reporting and proposal material for recurring sources;
  • Advise on funding opportunities; and
  • Work collaboratively with staff to execute on additional organizational priorities as they arise.
     

Qualifications: Ideal candidates will have lived and learned experience in issues of justice, equity, and inclusion, especially matters related to race, disability, and/or immigration. They will have relevant research and advocacy experience and a demonstrated capacity for community organizing. They will be future focused, data-driven, strategy-minded, and thrive in fast-paced startup environments. They will be methodical and detail oriented, with excellent writing, planning, and time management skills, and able to advance multiple projects simultaneously while meeting deadlines. They will be current on and comfortably engage with emerging technologies and demonstrate a commitment to technology solutions in the social enterprise space. They will be versed in the dance and culture landscape and have a wide cross-sector network. They will be comfortable working with Microsoft Office Suite and Google Apps and have an aptitude for working with online and mobile applications. Fluency in a foreign language is desired, but not required.  

Compensation: $18 per hour.

Location: The Dance/NYC offices are located on the Garden Floor (ground floor) of the Mertz Gilmore Foundation, 218 East 18th Street, New York, NY 10003. Access to the Garden Floor entrance includes a two-step descent. A lift to the entrance will be available in the coming months. An accessible bathroom is available onsite, and elevators are not available in the building.

Dance/NYC is an equal opportunity employer and provides equal employment opportunity without regard to race, color, sex, age, disability, religion, national origin, marital status, sexual orientation, ancestry, political belief or activity, or status as a veteran. The policy applies to all areas of employment, including recruitment, hiring, training and development, promotion, transfer, termination, layoff, compensation benefits, social and recreational programs, and all other conditions and privileges of employment in accordance with applicable federal, state, and local laws. It is the policy of Dance/NYC to comply with all the relevant and applicable provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Dance/NYC does not discriminate against any qualified Employees or job applicants with respect to any terms, privileges, or conditions of employment because of a person’s physical or mental disability. Dance/NYC makes reasonable accommodation wherever necessary for all Employees or applicants with disabilities, provided that the individual is otherwise qualified to safely perform the duties and assignments connected with the job and provided that any accommodations made do not require significant difficulty or expense.