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Civic Life

Civic Life

The Trust for Civic Life

A new collaborative funding local efforts that strengthen community bonds, civic engagement, and everyday democracy.  

Civic leaders, scholars, and philanthropists, including members of the Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, discuss the importance of civic life for a healthy democracy and the need for a Trust to support it in communities across the United States.
Featuring filming at The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands and video of three civic life projects: Reimagining the Civic Commons in Memphis, TN; Reimagining the Civic Commons in Akron, OH; and Vitalyst Health Foundation in Phoenix, AZ.

 

How did the Trust get started?

Americans’ trust in institutions and in each other is broken. This lack of trust needs to be addressed to build a stronger and healthier democracy. To this end, the Our Common Purpose report recommended a greater national investment in local civic efforts. These consist of gathering places like parks, libraries, schools, churches, and museums, spaces that bring people together and help form community bonds. Such places support interactions through which Americans can connect and develop a sense of common purpose.

The report called for private enterprises and philanthropic actors to come together to provide the seed funding necessary for the establishment of a national trust for civic life. To make this recommendation a reality, the Çï¿ûÊÓƵ convened a follow-up working group in 2021 that provided the thought leadership and guidance needed to incubate the Trust. With the backing of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, the MacArthur Foundation, Stand Together, and others, the launched in 2024.  

What work is the Trust supporting today?

The Trust is one of the few national grantmakers that directly supports locally-led community efforts that strengthen local civic life and democracy. The Trust focuses its funding in rural areas, places that are often by national philanthropies. Indeed, rural America only receives 7% of philanthropic spending. Rural communities have the leaders, ideas and skills to bring people together, yet often are unable to access the resources they need to scale and grow. The Trust has set up a new funding pipeline to support these on-the-ground efforts and get national dollars directly in the hands of the people who know their communities best.

Since 2024, the Trust has funded:

  • Civic hubs: organizations that bring people together to create a shared vision and come up with solutions that benefit the entire community 

  • Civic entrepreneurs: individuals or small organizations that are leading new programs to get their community members involved in solving local problems

This funding is supporting existing and new programs and gathering places that help community members to connect with one another and make their local civic life stronger.

Media Coverage

New York Times
The Chronicle of Philanthropy

To learn more about the Trust’s current grantees and the upcoming grant cycles, visit .

RECOMMENDATION 4.1

Establish a National Trust for Civic Infrastructure to scale up social, civic, and democratic infrastructure. Fund the Trust with a major nationwide investment campaign that bridges private enterprise and philanthropic seed funding. This might later be sustained through annual appropriations from Congress on the model of the National Endowment for Democracy.

Read in the report