HACER

Arts and Culture

Latine Artists of Minnesota

HACER conducted three focus groups and 10 in-depth interviews with Latine artists and arts professionals to gain insights into the barriers, motivations, and goals of artists around Minnesota. Participants ranged in ages, backgrounds, geographies, genders, and practices. They were recruited through social media, contact with community leaders, contact with arts organizations, and through a snowball method of recruitment that relies upon referrals from colleagues and peers of the initial participants.

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Suburban Realities: Latinos in Dakota County

As you drive through the highly visible Latino presence along Concord Street on the West Side of St. Paul, you barely notice that in a matter of minutes you have slipped into Dakota County. It is difficult to believe that the border between the West Side neighborhood of the city of St. Paul and the city of West St. Paul in Dakota County is the beginning of a significant barrier to the Latinos who cross it so frequently. Even people who live on one side or the other of that border are confused about the differences in being a resident of Dakota County as opposed to Ramsey County. Yet within a matter of blocks, there are no more Spanish language signs, no more Latino frescoes decorating the sides of buildings. And in a few miles the landscape becomes decidedly suburban, with fewer houses, more drive-in facilities and certainly no Spanish language signs, no visible Latino presence. It is difficult to imagine that there are over 10,000 Latinos—recently arrived migrant workers as well as middle class professionals—living on the “other side,” the southern side of the Dakota/ Ramsey County border.

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