Download 2021 Year In Review

2021 Year in review

Letter from Derrick Feldmann

Lead Researcher, Cause and Social Influence

When we started the Cause and Social Influence research project years ago, we kept one thing in mind: Let’s not report only on what people are interested in as reflected by their actions; let’s also show who is influencing their behavior. Without the latter, all of us can too easily slide into generalizations and stereotypes about young Americans.

Based on our 2021 research, it is clear that young people are being inspired to act for causes by what they see, hear and experience in social media platforms, of course – and also through experiences they witness firsthand. Essentially, as the advertising industry says, the out of home (OOH) experience moves them. 

While some will view the oldest members of gen z and the youngest millennials as strictly digital, we continue to see in our research that digital platforms are an “and” and not an “or” medium. Young people are influenced digitally AND in other ways – ways that brands and causes addressing social issues must consider when trying to incite action.

As I look into the issues and movements 18- to 30-year-olds have been actively involved with alongside their views and perceptions, I am reminded of something I wrote in an article in Philanthropy News Digest about the moveable middle. 

In the article, I talked about how moments happen every year and issues bubble up from time to time. While we all get entrenched in the daily interests of the anti or pro side of any issue, I said, a large majority of people take a position in the middle – a vantage point where one can see the merits of both arguments. As I look at involvement in social issues by the young people in our studies, I think 2021 followed the same path. New issues bubbled up each quarter from the cultural and social narratives carried forward from events and moments. 

But what happens when the noise leaves, the media stops paying attention, pressure by causes or even activists lets up and we move on with daily life? What happens before the next bubble?

I look at that time as a gift. Use it to truly understand what underlies your own or your organization’s social cause identity. See what issues are left standing and examine which ones are polarizing and which have the potential to numb interest in the large swath of those in the middle. 

We focused this final report on the one issue that remains constant with this group: Mental health. It’s within or near the top three to five issues of biggest concern for most young Americans we study year after year. As we enter an era of what some call the endemic portion of the COVID-19 pandemic, we cannot assume that this cohort wants to go back to the “normal” – the way things were before the pandemic – because they faced mental health challenges then, which have been exacerbated by isolation and fear. Perhaps they would rather find a new place where their mental and physical health can be addressed together. 

I leave you with one final thought before you dive into this year’s compilation. Your work as a corporate, cause and/or movement leader is to inform and educate others to change perceptions in ways that lead to actions or inaction. Keep that in mind as you peruse the findings because clearly, this generation desires knowledge about the moments and leading issues they witness or are exposed to on social media. 

Will you present knowledge in a way that allows a person to grow on their social issue journey, adding value to their experience and not just aiming at your own needs? That is the hard balance of any leader in the space: creating an environment of learning that enables the kind of influence necessary for true growth on the most important issues of our time.

 

Introduction

Each quarter, Cause and Social Influence tracks the behaviors and motivations of young Americans related to social issues and major moments. This, the final report of 2021, first presents findings from the final survey of the year alongside findings from earlier in the year for easy comparison. The report then shares findings from the final quarter’s two areas of focus: President Joe Biden’s performance and the social issue of mental health. See the previous 2021 reports at causeandsocialinfluence.com/download-latest-research.

Methodology

Cause and Social Influence researchers took a quantitative approach with online surveys fielded March 26-27, June 25, September 24-25 and December 17-18, 2021, of 1,000 young Americans (ages 18-30) each time – nationally representative samples based on census-projected ethnic and demographic composition. With the response rate of each survey, the data presented has a 95% confidence interval and 3% margin of error. Researchers asked respondents to self-identify their race/ethnicity and gender identity. Write-in answers and non-answers were accepted. Visit causeandsocialinfluence.com/2021finalreport for more demographic information on each sample.

Research Team

Derrick Feldmann Lead Researcher

Amy Thayer, Ph.D. Researcher

Madison Hanna Research Associate

Cindy Dashnaw Copywriter

Tyler Hansen Graphic Design

Key Findings

  • At the End of 2021, Gun Rights Interest Supplanted Concerns About Gun Safety and Animals

  • #HumanRights Overtook the Top Spot, Dropping #BlackLivesMatter Slightly to Number Two

  • Young Americans are Seeking Sources for Learning About Issues.

  • Young Americans Approve of President Joe Biden and Believe Government is Addressing Social Issues They Care About

  • Most Young Americans Believed They Understood President Biden’s Build Back Better Plan and the Recent Spending Bill; However, They Said, Affordable Housing, Affordable Child Care and Healthcare Needed More Attention

  • More Than Half of Young Americans Face Mental Health Challenges or Know Someone Who is – and Believe We All Share Responsibility

  • Young Americans Believe in the Right to Abortion and an Impartial SCOTUS

  • A Majority of Young Americans Wear Masks in Public and Agree with Vaccination or Testing Mandates

 
 

Winter Sample

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