Quantifying Kindness, Public Engagement And Place

  • 13 November 2019
  • 4 minute read

93% of PEOPLE IN THE UK AND IRELAND VIEW THEIR COMMUNITY AS KIND ON WORLD KINDNESS DAY

The first ever quantitative survey carried out on kindness in communities and public services has revealed that almost everyone within the UK and Ireland views their community as a kind place (93%) and most reciprocate by helping people in their area who need it (73%). The findings coincide with World Kindness Day which is being celebrated across the globe today (13th November).

The Ipsos MORI research, commissioned by Carnegie UK Trust, is part of the Trust’s new Quantifying Kindness report and commitment to exploring the extent to which communities are kind places and whether or not people experience kindness from each other and the services they use. The researchers spoke to over 5000 people to build up a picture of kindness across the UK and Ireland as a whole and for the nations and regions.

Across the UK and Ireland high life satisfaction is linked to strong experiences of community kindness: those who have strong experiences of community kindness are likely also to experience high levels of life satisfaction.

Within this positive picture, there are some differences in groups who are likely to strongly agree about kindness in their communities:

For public services, the survey found that people generally perceive public services as kind (from 83% of public transport users to 89% of GP users). Public libraries and GP Practices are seen as the kindest public services. Again, there are differences across groups:

Jennifer Wallace, Head of Policy at the Carnegie UK Trust, said: “Much is known at a psychological level about kindness as a relational concept and how it helps build a sense of belonging and contributes to wellbeing. Less is known about the extent to which our communities are kind places. This report presents the findings of the first, and largest, survey that explores this issue in depth.”

The research found:

Jennifer, continued: “What is refreshing is that the majority of people in the UK are highly satisfied with their lives and that most can rely on those around them to support their wellbeing. In a society which is as fast paced as it’s ever been, it’s humbling that we can still count on each other.”

* Community was defined as within a 15 minute walk and people were asked not to include family members or those they lived with when thinking about kindness in their communities. 

* The research was carried out by Ipsos MORI for the Carnegie UK Trust. The Carnegie UK Trust chooses to run these surveys with representative random sampling for approximately 1000 people within each of the legislative jurisdictions that the organisation covers: Scotland, England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Ireland.

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