The Project Coordinator (3 days a week role) is responsible for the smooth and efficient delivery of the Heritage Lottery Funded project Justice & Change and related community community partnerships critical to its delivery. This role involves working as part of a team comprising core MC staff and freelancers, artists, facilitators, project teams, a design team, and liaising with key partners and stakeholders as required. The post holder will be required to contribute to the project planning, delivery, community partnerships and communications. We are looking for someone with heritage and community experience who can demonstrate they have effectively delivered projects or programmes to achieve and report on contracted outputs and outcomes. You should be interested in working in community and creative settings. Overview Of Justice & Change Justice & Change is a new project by Metroland Cultures that will explore how the law impacts and shapes our lives. The project takes its starting point from the Brent Community Law Centre (BCLC), one of the first community law centres to be set up in the U.K in 1971. BCLC developed a unique approach to community law that focused on collective action rather than individual cases, alongside creating The Brent Young People's Law Project that specifically worked with young people and the legal struggles they were facing in four areas - care, employment, education and criminal justice. What can looking at the existing archives of a law centre tell us about life in Brent during the 1970s, and what can it teach us about how the law impacts and shapes our lives today? How can it support us to imagine and practice justice as community care? How can listening to past community responses to harm offer us lessons in healing, repair and prevention for now, and in the future? How can exploring these histories creatively support people to respond to the issues that are most impacting them today? To support Metroland Culture's (MC) Programmes Curator to shape and deliver the Justice and Change programme - a 2 year project designed to foreground the history of community organising and resistance in Brent through the lens of the former Brent Community Law Centre (BCLC) - one of the first UK not-for-profit legal advice services for Brent residents. The role will be divided across two main areas: collating the physical archive with founders of the BCLC and Brent Museums and Archives (BMA) and supporting the delivery of community engagement, and public programming with MC partners Asian Womens' Resource Centre (AWRC), PLIAS Resettlement Youth and No More Exclusions (NME). You will work alongside MC and On the Record project staff. You will also receive training in oral history and receive an introduction to Brent Archives and how to handle archival material/objects as well as Trauma-Informed Care Training - using trauma awareness to enhance everyday practice. There is no application form, please submit an A4 PDF including: Alternatively, you may submit a short video covering the same information : If you have any access requirements or prefer to apply in a different format, we’re happy to support this – just get in touch. Please send your applications along with the equal opportunities form to team@metrolandcultures by Friday 10th October 2025 12 midnight. If shortlisted you will be invited to an interview on Friday 17th October 2025.Job Summary
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One side cover letter and one side CV (2 A4 pages)
Please include your name in the file name
A completed Equal Opportunities Monitoring Form which can be downloaded here
Format: MP4, max 5 minutes
Orientation: filmed horizontally on a phone (does not need to be professionally filmed)