What if you knew the strength of trusting behaviors, trusting intentions, and trusting spaces in your own community? Not in your city, county, or your zip code, but in your own neighborhood? How might you use that information to create belonging and trust with your neighbors?
That’s what Weave’s Social Trust Map tells you in a four-minute, interactive experience on your phone. It shares stories of how people everywhere are quietly showing up for others where they live to restore connection and trust in our divided country. Then you pick your neighborhood on the map and see what strengths you and others can build on to weave neighbors into a tighter community.
This week, the international Webby Awards announced their picks for the best online, mission-driven work of the year. Weave’s Trust Map won three of their Anthem Awards – gold for best use of data, bronze for local community engagement, and the Community Voice award (chosen by popular vote) for offering opportunities to engage the local community in an important cause.
If you haven’t seen the Trust Map yet, explore it at WeavingTrust.org. You’ll be able to put yourself on the map as someone who cares about uniting our communities and country, and you’ll see opportunities to get involved in weaving work right where you live.
Share the map with your friends and colleagues and help Weave with its mission to create a strong new social fabric for America. When columnist and author David Brooks started Weave: The Social Fabric Project at the Aspen Institute, he aimed to heal us by inspiring a nation of weavers.
For more on Weave’s Gold Award for Best use of data
For more on Weave’s Bronze and Community Voice Awards for Local Community Engagement.