Street Work design principles for justice
MJN’s mission is a mirror for our values of justice, loving care, and solidarity. Instead of approaching new projects with a sector lens, we typically start by asking: Why are justice, loving care, and solidarity not the norm in any given area of work that collective members care about; and how would we design differently?
This question often leads to design principles unique to a given program, and based on the programs unique circumstance or style of work. Learn about Street Work's practice design principles, intended to bring justice into the heart of our creative practice.
We co-create with audiences and commit to authentically sharing power with audiences as an embodiment of democracy.
We are place-based, see relationship as art, center our “audiences,” — not only self-expression — and center joy as fundamental.
We design for and serve public space — like streets, sidewalks, and parks.
We aim to spark hopeful, concrete co-actions that our communities can take to transform frustration, fear, sorrow, confusion, unknowns, or uncertainty into solutions.
Artists and organizers — many of us among them — have been working on the street long before this program existed. We’re listening to develop a “blueprint” to open-source structures behind Street Works.
Practitioners of climate solutions are all around us. We need each other, and we need joy, inspiration, and the freedom of imagination to keep going.
What we eat, how we breathe, how we rest, how we love are all connected to mother Earth. And our conversations around justice, environmentalism, health, climate, wealth, and more can be re-woven with our local, personal priorities and joys.