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Designing Our Way Forward: How Intergenerational Civic Culture Can Renew America

Ashoka and GEO are pleased to invite you to a conversation on strengthening intergenerational connection.

A century ago, Americans of all ages lived, worked, worshipped and organized together as a matter of course. Today, we are simultaneously the most age-diverse society in history and one of the most age-segregated — by design. The costs are mounting: loneliness, lost purpose, eroded trust and a civic culture increasingly mediated by outrage rather than relationships.

But something is shifting. Research points to deep, pent-up demand among older and younger Americans to work together on the issues that matter most — mental health, climate, democracy itself. Social entrepreneurs are responding. The question for philanthropy is how to meet this moment with practices that are responsive, relational and grounded in community priorities.

Join us for a tour of practitioner insights from the Ashoka Action Lab — what’s emerging across higher education, K–12, housing, caregiving, the arts and community organizations when generations are intentionally brought together. Which approaches are taking root, and what conditions help them endure?

In conversation, we’ll explore how grantmakers can translate these insights into practice — what it looks like to fund for connection, shift decision-making closer to communities and support experiments that build trust and shared purpose across difference. Where are the openings for learning and adaptation? Which investments feel most catalytic now?

Speakers

Marc Freedman

Marc Freedman

Founder and Co-CEO
CoGenerate

Marc Freedman is the founder and Co-CEO of CoGenerate, founding Faculty Director of the Yale Experienced Leaders Initiative (Yale ELI Fellows), and a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University. He is one of the nation’s leading experts on our multigenerational future and the author of five books. The Wall Street Journal named his most recent book — How to Live Forever: The Enduring Power of Connecting the Generations (Hachette Book Group/PublicAffairs) — one of the year’s best books on aging well. Originator of the encore career idea linking second acts to the greater good, Freedman co-created Experience Corps, the Purpose Prize, and Encore Fellowships. Freedman has been honored with numerous awards and fellowships, including an Ashoka Senior Fellowship, the Skoll Award for Social Entrepreneurship and a Social Entrepreneur of the Year award from the Schwab Foundation/World Economic Forum.

Samara Randhawa

Samara Randhawa

Co-Lead, New Longevity
Ashoka

Samara Randhawa co-leads Ashoka’s New Longevity initiative, a global program redesigning how societies enable lifelong contribution across all stages of life. With two decades of experience working closely with Ashoka social entrepreneurs, she has co-created narratives and strategies that accelerate social impact. Her expertise includes narrative shift strategy and systems-change thinking—with a deep passion for redefining longevity as an asset for humanity. Her personal motivation is rooted in the belief that everyone has the power to create positive change. Samara holds a BA in Political Science from Carleton University and is a dual citizen of Canada and the US. She currently resides in the Washington, DC area with her husband and three children.

Trent Stamp

CEO
The Eisner Foundation

Trent Stamp has served as CEO of The Eisner Foundation since 2008, leading its evolution into the nation’s only foundation dedicated exclusively to intergenerational solutions. A nationally recognized voice on healthy aging, philanthropy, nonprofit governance, and intergenerational programs, he has written for publications including Harvard Business Review, Forbes, The Washington Post, and The Chronicle of Philanthropy. He co-edited Stanford Social Innovation Review’s “Meeting the Multigenerational Movement” series and contributed to The Oxford Handbook of Intergenerational Connections (2025).

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