Local Trust is a place-based funder supporting communities to achieve their ambitions.
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< Back to main menuBig Local is an exciting opportunity for residents in 150 areas to create lasting change in their communities.
About the programmeEssential guidance, information and ideas for Big Local partnerships, to help you deliver change in your community.
Visit the support centreFind out how the principles of Big Local have inspired other programmes creating change in local communities.
Community Leadership Academy
Supporting volunteers involved in Big Local projects to develop their skills and knowledge.
Find out moreCreative Civic Change
This new approach to funding enabled communities to use art and creativity to make positive local change.
Find out moreThe latest news and stories from Big Local areas and beyond, exploring community power and resident-led change.
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Voices of Big Local
Inspiring stories from the people making change happen in their communities.
Read moreLocal Trust is a place-based funder supporting communities to achieve their ambitions.
Find out moreGo straight to…
< Back to main menuBig Local is an exciting opportunity for residents in 150 areas to create lasting change in their communities.
About the programmeEssential guidance, information and ideas for Big Local partnerships, to help you deliver change in your community.
Visit the support centreFind out how the principles of Big Local have inspired other programmes creating change in local communities.
Community Leadership Academy
Supporting volunteers involved in Big Local projects to develop their skills and knowledge.
Find out moreCreative Civic Change
This new approach to funding enabled communities to use art and creativity to make positive local change.
Find out moreThe latest news and stories from Big Local areas and beyond, exploring community power and resident-led change.
ExploreGo straight to…
Voices of Big Local
Inspiring stories from the people making change happen in their communities.
Read more
In 2018, Local Trust commissioned OCSI to develop new data analysis to explore the difference that social infrastructure makes to outcomes in deprived communities. The resulting Community Needs Index (CNI) measures the local social and cultural factors that can impact people’s life chances.
Local Trust’s early experience of delivering the Big Local programme had indicated that social infrastructure was often a key determinant of the prospects of Big Local areas, providing a springboard for community mobilisation and renewal.
We wanted to investigate whether this finding was generalisable across the country.
The CNI incorporates community and social challenges which have not been captured in the traditional deprivation metrics such as the Indices of Deprivation. These include poor community and civic infrastructure, as well as low levels of participation and engagement in the wider community.
It’s not so much about the presence of unemployment, crime, ill health or wider economic deprivation. It’s more about the absence of the positive building blocks that make up a strong community – an active third sector, well developed social networks and the places and spaces that underpin local social fabric and cohesion.
The CNI has been designed to combine with other frameworks to identify need at a hyper-local level. It formed the basis for foundational research into ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods, which overlaid the CNI with the Indices of Deprivation to identify areas experiencing the double disadvantage of high levels of socioeconomic deprivation and poor social infrastructure.
Combining these indices helps identify areas where community renewal and regeneration is particularly challenging, as efforts to improve local conditions are held back by a lack of access to civic assets and a low starting-point for community mobilisation and engagement.
The CNI has become increasingly recognised as an objective measure of social capital. It has previously been used in conjunction with the Index of Multiple Deprivation to identify areas most in need of investment:
In 2022, we launched a consultation on how best to improve the Community Needs Index, and worked with an Advisory Group of experts from across government, academia and civil society to refine the methodology for the research and expand the evidence base for measuring social infrastructure. The results of the consultation and feedback from the Advisory Group have fed into the refinements to our approach.
The Community Needs Index Technical Methodology Paper provides details of the methodological changes and approach to building the new version of the Index.
The new methodology uses the latest data, including from the 2021 Census. It takes broadly the same approach as the previous iteration regarding scope and data categories; however, there has been a review of the underlying indicators, weighting methodology and units of geography used to construct the Index.