Lessons from the 2025 Trust in Practice Summit

The Summit featured over 30 dynamic speakers and a lineup of sessions designed to explore the multifaceted nature of social trust and inspire action across sectors. Jenn White of 1A served as the emcee, weaving together the day’s narratives and keeping the audience engaged throughout the event. From lightning talks by trailblazing social innovators like Orlando Bailey of Outlier Media or Arica Gonzalez of The Urban Oasis, to a reveal of new findings on the state of social trust in America from Pew Research Center, the presentations and conversations were both data-driven and deeply rooted in lived experience.
A fireside chat connected insights to practical trust-building efforts on the ground, while a panel on cross-sector partnerships featuring Vilas Dhar, President, The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, Charlie Brown, Executive Director, Trust for Civic Life, Sixto Cancel, Founder & CEO, Think Of US and Orriel Richardson, Head of Policy & Advocacy, Morgan Health, JPMorgan Chase unpacked the challenges and successes of collaborative work to build lasting relationships within and between communities. Interactive roundtable discussions allowed participants to break down organizational silos and co-create concrete roadmaps for collective action—laying the groundwork for stronger, more unified trust-building efforts at every level.
The Summit built on the foundation of a pre-meeting the day prior, designed exclusively for practitioners, featuring social innovators like Asiaha Butler, CEO of Resident Association of Greater Englewood and Janice Ikeda, Executive Director of Vibrant Hawai’, as well as national leaders like Brian Hooks, Chairman and CEO of Stand Together and Frederick Riley, Executive Director of Weave: The Social Fabric Project who shared stories, lessons, and insights from their work with communities across the United States.
The insights shared during the Summit extended beyond formal sessions. The Summit’s energy and learnings also came from informal conversations, breakout sessions, and moments of reflection. Here are some of the most resonant lessons we’re carrying forward:
This Trust in Practice Summit was not an endpoint—it’s a beginning. Together, we crafted detailed roadmaps to guide ongoing, coordinated work—turning ideas into tangible action. We made connections that serve as seeds for future partnerships. We shared a sense of purpose that serves as the foundation for a movement. Moving forward, our next steps include:
The Trust in Practice Summit affirmed a central truth: trust is both urgent and possible. Through deliberate collaboration, consistent action, and a shared vision, we can build and strengthen the social fabric of our communities.
The Alliance for Social Trust remains committed to leading and supporting this movement. We will continue to invest in the people, practices, and partnerships that build trust not only as a value—but as a way of working, leading, and living.
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