Professor Maloney to Join Debate on Culture and Business

Richard Maloney, assistant professor and director ad interim of arts administration, is a panelist for “Teaching and Learning Cultural Entrepreneurship in the 21st Century,” the European Network of Cultural Administration Training Center’s (ENCATC) Fifth Annual Policy Debate. The event will be held this summer in Brussels. Learn more about ENCATC and the debate Source: ENCATC.org […]

MET Professor Quoted on Juggling College, Home, and Work Life

Given the challenges of balancing grad school and other responsibilities, it’s important to be committed right from the start. That’s the advice Richard G. Maloney, PhD, assistant professor and director ad interim of Metropolitan College’s Arts Administration Program gives prospective students in the 2015 issue of Graduate College & Universities. “In my experience, self-awareness and […]

Policy Networks, Urban Economic Development, and the Arts

Photo: flickr/Harvey Barrison By Richard Maloney Thursday, February 19, 2015 1:30–2:30 PM 808 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 109 Rich is Assistant Professor of Arts Administration and Director ad interim of the Arts Administration program where he teaches classes in performing arts management, fundraising, internship, the art world and comparative cultural policy.  As a professional musician, he  has […]

Arts Administration’s Richard Maloney on Jury for 2014 ENCATC Award

Assistant Professor and Director ad interim of Arts Administration Richard Maloney was a member of the award jury for the 2014 ENCATC Cultural Policy and Cultural Management Research Award, bestowed on Elodie Bordat, from Sciences Po Aix-en-Provence in France. ENCATC is the leading European network on cultural management and cultural policy education. The award ceremony—held […]

MET Professors Pen Op-Ed on Arts in Boston

Assistant Professor of Arts Administration Rich Maloney and Associate Professor of Administrative Sciences Jay Halfond co-authored an Op-Ed piece on the role of the arts in Boston, which appeared in the Boston Herald earlier this week. The article cites the strong historical presence of the arts in the city, and examines the advantages this tradition […]