By PETER SMITH, Associated Press
It’s been called an “epidemic” of loneliness and isolation. The “bowling alone” phenomenon.
By any name, it refers to Americans’ growing social disconnection by many measures.
Americans are less likely to join civic groups, unions and churches than in recent generations. They have fewer friends, are less trusting of each other and less likely to hang out in a local bar or coffee shop, recent polling indicates. Given all that, it’s not surprising that many feel lonely or isolated much of the time.
Such trends form the backdrop to this Associated Press report on small groups working to restore community connections.
They include a ministry pursuing “trauma-informed community development” in Pittsburgh; a cooperative helping small farmers and their communities in Kentucky; an “intentional” community of Baltimore neighbors; and organizations seeking to restore neighborhoods and neighborliness in Akron, Ohio.

1 month ago
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