Author:
Ilona Haslewood
Year: 2016

How Does Kindness Happen And What Might Help To Encourage Such Supportive Relationships?

  A smile and ‘good morning’ in passing, taking in a parcel, sitting down and listening over a cup of tea, giving a lift, or babysitting for someone once a week… small acts of help and kindness and the relationships that are formed through these play an important role in making our lives ‘liveable’. As such, they are an essential – if often overlooked – part of the social, emotional and practical infrastructure of daily life. While they tap into wider, long-standing societal concerns about trust, kindness, generosity, solidarity and the common good, surprisingly little is known about how exactly they come to happen and what might help to encourage (or constrain) such supportive relationships. This paper summarises learning from a body of recent Joseph Rowntree Foundation research.

Recent Publications

August 11, 2023

Two years on, our strategy still guides our path

by Sarah Davidson, Carnegie UK

It is a cliche of the Covid era that many of us struggle to recall which year was which. Events which we can be certain about act as useful anchors amongst those strange, unmoored months which are otherwise hard to pin down.

In the life of Carnegie UK, August 2021 was one such anchor – the month in which we published our new Strategy for Change alongside a new brand.

That publication marked the end of almost two years of review and reassessment.  As I said at the time, if there was ever a moment for a wellbeing organisation to lean into its mission, then that was surely it. Although in autumn 2021 we didn’t know the precise path out of the pandemic, we already knew enough to understand that this unprecedented event would have a long tail of impacts on our collective wellbeing – and particularly on those who were already most disadvantaged.

However we didn’t know then that the direct effects of Covid 19 would be exacerbated  by the disruption of global supply chains; war on the continent of Europe; a huge economic shock in our own country, and a devastating cost of living crisis. If we hadn’t already identified a set of principles intended to help everyone live well together, we’d certainly have had to invent one by now.

Two years on, I see we sounded hopeful in August 2021 that the experiences of the Covid years had taught us all some valuable lessons. A deeper appreciation of what matters in life; the liberation of community power; an emphasis on relationships and kindness in public services; a recognition of the fragility of global systems, and the importance of building future resilience. In Carnegie UK language, a balancing of social, economic, environmental, and economic outcomes.

It’s fair to say that we were over-optimistic about the pace of policy change. However, one of the privileges of being an endowed foundation is that we can take a long-term view.

Since August 2021, we’ve been working with others to put collective wellbeing at the heart of decision making and to tackle existing and emerging threats to wellbeing. As our Year in Review 2022-2023 illustrates, there’s no single approach or one organisation that will achieve this alone. We’ve enjoyed building new partnerships and collaborations and experimenting with new ways of working – as well as welcoming new staff and trustees to the Carnegie UK team.

Retrospectives like these are a timely reminder that predicting the future is a fool’s errand. However, the strategic context has not changed. The threats to our collective wellbeing are real and growing, not least the existential threat of climate change.  As we embark on the next phase of our work together, we will continue to be guided by our values – motivated by change; challenging; collaborative and kind – and the commitment to the vision of a society where everyone has what they need to live well now and in the future.

Today Carnegie UK aims to improve collective wellbeing by influencing public policy and practice. 

We do this by conducting research and writing reports. But we’re also working to amplify the voices of a wide range of individuals and communities, drawing on their experience to make the case for change to politicians, civil servants and other decision-makers.

In 2021, Carnegie UK published a new strategy  which reaffirms our role as a wellbeing organisation. In line with recent strategies we’ve retained our operating foundation model, meaning that we use our money to fund our research and practice work, rather than running open grant programmes.  

We have a team of 17 staff and 14 trustees who are responsible for our operations and governance. 

In all our work it is important to us to be:

Motivated by change:

we want change people’s lives for the better.

Challenging:

social progress requires using research and evidence to speak truth to power.

Collaborative:

we will build coalitions to tackle injustice and change systems.

Kind:

we will put strong relationships and kindness at the heart of everything we do.