Helen Clark Foundation Releases 2026 Social Cohesion Survey
New Zealand’s social fabric is under strain, according to the Helen Clark Foundation’s second annual Social Cohesion in New Zealand report. The survey of 2,882 adults conducted in late 2025 reveals declines across every measured dimension, with financial stress emerging as the dominant driver. Trust in government has fallen to record lows, and loneliness is rising. Yet the report also highlights resilient strengths: 84 percent of respondents feel a sense of belonging to the country and take pride in the New Zealand way of life.
Universities across the country are uniquely positioned to help reverse these trends. As institutions dedicated to knowledge creation, critical thinking, and community engagement, they are already mobilising resources to address the challenges identified in the report.
Key Findings from the 2026 Report
The Helen Clark Foundation report, modelled on Australia’s Scanlon Foundation Social Cohesion Monitor, tracks five core domains: belonging, social justice, participation, acceptance and rejection, and worth. Every domain recorded a decline compared with the 2025 wave. Financial stress was cited by respondents as the single biggest factor eroding cohesion, followed by declining trust in institutions and growing perceptions that hard work no longer guarantees a fair go.
Younger New Zealanders aged 18–35 remain more optimistic than older cohorts, suggesting that targeted interventions could yield long-term gains. The report also identifies three distinct groups: the connected, the ambivalent, and the alienated, with roughly 30 percent of the population feeling alienated from mainstream society.
Why Universities Matter in Rebuilding Cohesion
Higher education institutions serve as microcosms of wider society. They bring together students from diverse ethnic, socioeconomic, and regional backgrounds, offering structured opportunities for meaningful cross-group interaction. The report explicitly notes that educational settings can foster the “small actions” needed to strengthen belonging and friendship networks.
Universities also produce the research that informs policy. Several institutions are already analysing the data released by the Helen Clark Foundation to design evidence-based programmes that address financial stress, trust deficits, and social isolation among students and staff.
University of Auckland Leads Community Dialogue
The University of Auckland has hosted public forums examining the report’s implications for urban communities. Faculty from the School of Social Sciences are collaborating with local iwi and community organisations to translate findings into practical initiatives that strengthen neighbourhood-level connections.
These forums emphasise the report’s call for diversified media access and youth-focused programmes, aligning with the university’s existing community-engagement strategy.
Victoria University of Wellington Focuses on Trust and Institutions
Victoria University of Wellington’s School of Government is examining the sharp drop in trust in government recorded in the survey. Researchers are developing case studies that explore how transparent decision-making and student-led civic education can rebuild confidence in public institutions.
Early findings suggest that embedding civics modules across undergraduate programmes could help the next generation view government as a partner rather than an adversary.
Photo by Trnava University on Unsplash
Massey University Targets Financial Stress and Student Wellbeing
Massey University has launched a cross-campus initiative linking financial literacy workshops with mental-health support. The programme responds directly to the report’s finding that financial stress is fracturing social cohesion, particularly among younger adults and those in regional areas.
By integrating wellbeing services with practical financial guidance, Massey aims to reduce isolation and improve students’ sense of control over their futures.
University of Otago Emphasises Belonging and Pride
The University of Otago is leveraging the report’s positive findings on belonging and national pride. Campus programmes now include more opportunities for students to celebrate New Zealand’s bicultural heritage and multicultural communities through shared events and curriculum content.
These initiatives build on the 84 percent of respondents who already feel connected to the country, turning that foundation into stronger local and institutional ties.
Research Collaborations Across the Sector
New Zealand universities are forming a national research consortium to monitor social cohesion indicators annually. The consortium will feed data back to the Helen Clark Foundation and government agencies, ensuring that higher-education insights contribute to national policy.
Early projects focus on the impact of international student integration, the role of digital platforms in shaping attitudes, and the effectiveness of peer-mentoring schemes in reducing alienation.
Student-Led Responses and Campus Culture
Student associations at multiple universities are running campaigns that mirror the report’s recommendations for “small actions.” These include inter-faculty friendship programmes, community service days, and media-literacy workshops designed to counter misinformation and polarisation.
Student leaders report that participation in these activities has increased since the report’s release, indicating genuine appetite for constructive engagement.
Challenges and Resource Constraints
Despite enthusiasm, universities face funding pressures that limit the scale of new initiatives. The report’s authors note that sustained investment in education and community infrastructure will be required if higher-education institutions are to fulfil their potential as cohesion-building agents.
Sector leaders are calling for targeted government support to expand successful pilot programmes nationwide.
Photo by Hermes Rivera on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Actionable Steps
The Helen Clark Foundation report concludes that restoring social cohesion requires coordinated effort across government, civil society, and the education sector. Universities are already demonstrating leadership by translating research into practice.
Next steps include scaling student wellbeing programmes, expanding civic-education modules, and deepening partnerships with iwi and community organisations. With younger New Zealanders showing greater optimism, sustained university engagement offers a realistic pathway to stronger national cohesion by the end of the decade.
