The Tamarack Institute is a registered Canadian charity dedicated to ending poverty in all its forms, for good. We support real people and invest in real communities for long-term change.
This guide was developed to help communities, non-profits, changemakers, volunteers, municipalities and everyday residents join the call for a Canada-wide Belonging Strategy. You will learn how to effectively facilitate conversations on community belonging, include diverse voices, and more. Discover our call for a Strategy for Belonging.
Download the PDF version of this guide for interactive forms you can fill out for your convenience. Refer to the appendices in Section 2 for tools and resources you can print off and use in your community.
Over the past decade, Canada, like other countries, has seen an increase in loneliness and social disconnection. Even though technology keeps us more connected than ever, many people feel increasingly disconnected and lonely. This loneliness can have serious effects – research shows that feeling lonely is as bad for your health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
To address this growing issue, the Tamarack Institute introduced the idea of creating a nationwide Belonging Strategy at our 2023 Asset-Based Community Development event. The idea is to support local communities – focusing on residents and community groups – to create and implement solutions that reflect the needs and voices of their own neighbourhoods. This Canada-wide strategy would also ensure that there are ongoing resources (federal and provincial) dedicated to supporting those who work in and care for our communities.
To build this strategy, we need to start with conversations within communities across Canada. This will help us learn what is strong, what assets we already have, and what we need to inform the federal government on how to shape the strategy. Your communities’ voices, ideas, and participation are crucial to this process.
The goals of this call for community conversations include:
We hope to mobilize our partners, members and networks to organize and host conversations. This initiative can take many forms and does not need to be complicated or formal. Examples include casual kitchen conversations, discussing your group's agenda, or simply conversing with your neighbours. Tamarack aims to get 100,000 voices from all provinces and territories in Canada to contribute to the belonging strategy. Along with our partners, we will then synthesize the data collected, put together recommendations, and present them to the Federal government in 2025.
Have you already held a conversation around belonging? Let us know!
Contact Jorge at jorge@tamarackcommunity.ca.
October, 2024 – December, 2024
Helpful links:Thank you for supporting the Canada-wide Belonging Strategy. We have put together this guide to assist you in organizing conversations around belonging in your community. If you have any questions, please reach out to Jorge Garza at jorge@tamarackcommunity.ca.
Yours in Conversation,
The Tamarack Institute and Partners
Download the PDF version of this guide for interactive forms you can fill out for your convenience. Refer to the appendices in Section 2 for tools and resources you can print off and use in your community.
We encourage participation from people of diverse backgrounds, voices, lived experiences, and cultures to enrich the conversations. Hosting a conversation doesn’t need to be complicated.
Here are a few ideas and considerations when planning for your conversations:
You can host a traditional conversation where participants gather in a room, and you guide them through the discussion. Consider who will attend and the best way to gather input. You know your community best—enjoy the process!
The goal of a great conversation is to help people to think together. To achieve this, it is often helpful to outline – and get agreement on guidelines – for the conversation. These can include:
Download the PDF version of this guide for the remaining sections and interactive forms you can fill out for your convenience. Refer to the appendices in Section 2 for tools and resources you can print off and use in your community.