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The 2Gen Approach

Two-generation (2Gen) approaches build family well-being by intentionally and simultaneously working with children and the adults in their lives together. 2Gen approaches center on the whole family to create a legacy of educational success and economic prosperity that passes from one generation to the next.

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ABOUT THE 2GEN APPROACH

2Gen approaches recognize whole family units, as families define themselves, in order to understand the multiple dimensions of family life and consider a variety of pathways for promoting positive, pragmatic, and effective outcomes for everyone. We work with families as experts and meaningfully engage parents and caregivers in designing policies and programs that affect them in order to develop holistic, integrated, and equity-focused solutions. This family-centered lens helps us to immediately identify families’ needs and goals and informs integrations and alignments to programs that serve them, which maximizes long-term impact for families and communities.


Many programs focus solely on the child or the parent(s), but 2Gen approaches do not focus exclusively on either a child’s development or isolate an adult’s needs because their well-being is interconnected and interdependent. 2Gen approaches aim to integrate services and supports to move the whole family forward, benefiting both the child and the adult(s) in their lives.


A 2Gen approach can take many forms in policy and practice. One example of such an approach would be a college or career training program that connects adult caregivers with childcare programs. This way, a parent or caregiver can pursue higher education while their child’s development is also supported. Child-parent approaches focus primarily on the child but are moving toward a two-generation approach by including services and opportunities for the parent. This could look like a care center providing young children with early childhood education opportunities while also offering a workforce development program for parents and caregivers. Parent-child approaches focus primarily on the parent but are moving toward a two-generation approach by including services and opportunities for children. One example would be a place of employment that provides caregiving employees with child care referrals or a family resource renter.


THE ORIGINS OF 2GEN

The 2Gen approach recognizes family as fundamental to human development. This intuitive link between individual and collective success has long been recognized by indigineous communities in the U.S. and around the globe, but supporting entire family units wasn’t employed as a formal, federal strategy until the early development of the human services sector in the late 19th century.


The term “2Gen” was coined in the late 1980s by the Foundation for Child Development to reflect programs that were emerging across the country. 2Gen approaches continued to gain traction throughout the early 2000s, and reemerged in 2010. In 2012, in partnership with a group of philanthropic partners, Ascend at the Aspen Institute published the “Two Generations, One Future” report that laid the groundwork for the growth and development of the 2Gen field’s expansion. Then, with a decade of accomplishments and learnings from its Network of partners and Fellows, Ascend released the landmark “State of the Field: Two Generation Approaches to Family Well-Being” that outlines our vision for exponential expansion and implementation.


The“two-generation” or “2Gen” approach has been and continues to be referred to by many names within and across the field – “whole family,” “intergenerational,” “Ohana Nui,” “multigenerational,” “multi-gen,” “generation to generation,” and “Gen2Gen” – which all encompass the same fundamental principles: 2Gen approaches reflect and embrace the diverse shapes, sizes, and structures of families to ensure all family members can reach their full potential.


KEY COMPONENTS OF WELL-BEING

Well-being is a multifaceted process and lifelong pursuit. An individual’s or family’s well-being isn’t a solo endeavor, and financial, social, mental, and spiritual health depends on a person and family’s context, the resources and opportunities available to them, and the support of others. 2Gen approaches have a robust vision to improve conditions for families by coordinating equitable access to the systems and structures that are necessary to thrive economically and socially. Ultimately, 2Gen approaches recognize six key components to improve families’ financial stability, social capital, health care, and quality education.



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