2024 Global Loneliness Awareness Summit
Each June, alongside our partners at the Global Initiative on Loneliness and Connection (GILC) and Marmalade Trust, the Coalition activates local communities, policymakers, and innovators for Global Loneliness Awareness Week. Together, we share resources, identify areas of collaboration, and educate the public on the importance of connection. This year, we are excited to convene once again on June 11th in Washington, D.C. Stay tuned for more information – including our agenda and speakers!
Cornell Institute for Healthy Futures
With the growing global mental health crisis, this event is dedicated to fostering insightful discussions, exploring innovative approaches, and understanding the evolving landscape of mental wellness in our community. We will bring together diverse perspectives exploring the future of design for mental health through the lens of programs, place, and tech. We will break down silos, charting a transdisciplinary path forward to cultivate meaningful change and provide a context for future design and research.
Global Exchange for Mental Health
Learn about the link between social health and overall health outcomes, specifically how loneliness has toxic health outcomes worse than smoking and obesity, and how social connection fosters health.
Explore how the built environment is a determinant of social health, working on a systems level to help to foster social interaction and health
Understand how third places impact social health and what tangible steps we can all take to reduce feelings of loneliness in our lives and in our communities.
Share an evidence-based framework to design for social connection, examine scalable strategies that lead to social environments that promote meaningful connections.
Building Connected Communities
American adults say that having close friends is essential to living a fulfilling life.
Social infrastructure in our cities and communities can foster connection.
Clubs and associations tie us to local community and support.
Being more present with others can foster connection.
Buildings That Can Heal in the Wake of Trauma
Practitioners of the emerging architectural movement called trauma-informed design see buildings as “the first line of therapy.”
Caring and Showing up for Others
“Something inside me still lights up when I think about how to use the built environment to love and care for people, not just my family, but for people I might never meet, and the people that care for them.”
America's broken housing market is making millennials and Gen Z lonelier
"We need to think beyond just the individual," Julianne Holt-Lunstad, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Brigham Young University and a leading loneliness researcher, told Insider. "We often neglect the built environment."
SXSW 2020: The Antidote to Loneliness
In a time of hyper connection and communication, many of us report feeling lonely and detached, and there is strong evidence that this has a toxic effect on our health and happiness. This panel will discuss what’s driving increases in social isolation and loneliness (hint: it’s not just technology) and examine scalable strategies — some unexpected — that lead to social environments that promote meaningful connections. The trick is to think not only about places where communities are formed IRL, but the people who gather there and the shared experiences that keep them coming back. Huge opportunities await entrepreneurs who can leverage this knowledge to build a future marked by connections that boost our collective health.